Literature DB >> 12746620

[History, accuracy and precision of SMBG devices].

L Dufaitre-Patouraux1, P Vague, V Lassmann-Vague.   

Abstract

Self-monitoring of blood glucose started only fifty years ago. Until then metabolic control was evaluated by means of qualitative urinary blood measure often of poor reliability. Reagent strips were the first semi quantitative tests to monitor blood glucose, and in the late seventies meters were launched on the market. Initially the use of such devices was intended for medical staff, but thanks to handiness improvement they became more and more adequate to patients and are now a necessary tool for self-blood glucose monitoring. The advanced technologies allow to develop photometric measurements but also more recently electrochemical one. In the nineties, improvements were made mainly in meters' miniaturisation, reduction of reaction time and reading, simplification of blood sampling and capillary blood laying. Although accuracy and precision concern was in the heart of considerations at the beginning of self-blood glucose monitoring, the recommendations of societies of diabetology came up in the late eighties. Now, the French drug agency: AFSSAPS asks for a control of meter before any launching on the market. According to recent publications very few meters meet reliability criteria set up by societies of diabetology in the late nineties. Finally because devices may be handled by numerous persons in hospitals, meters use as possible source of nosocomial infections have been recently questioned and is subject to very strict guidelines published by AFSSAPS.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12746620

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Diabetes Metab        ISSN: 1262-3636            Impact factor:   6.041


  3 in total

1.  Toward an injectable continuous osmotic glucose sensor.

Authors:  Erik Johannessen; Olga Krushinitskaya; Andrey Sokolov; Häfliger Philipp; Arno Hoogerwerf; Christian Hinderling; Kari Kautio; Jaakko Lenkkeri; Esko Strömmer; Vasily Kondratyev; Tor Inge Tønnessen; Tom Eirik Mollnes; Henrik Jakobsen; Even Zimmer; Bengt Akselsen
Journal:  J Diabetes Sci Technol       Date:  2010-07-01

Review 2.  Glucose meters: a review of technical challenges to obtaining accurate results.

Authors:  Ksenia Tonyushkina; James H Nichols
Journal:  J Diabetes Sci Technol       Date:  2009-07-01

3.  Comparability of hemoglobin A1c level measured in capillary versus venous blood sample applying two point-of-care instruments.

Authors:  Tahereh Keramati; Farideh Razi; Ali Tootee; Bagher Larijani
Journal:  J Diabetes Metab Disord       Date:  2014-10-30
  3 in total

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