Posts Tagged ‘onset diabetes mellitus’
How to interpret a sudden elevation in serum glucose level?
Product Description
An 83-year-old male patient of mine has no history of diabetes (during a random serum glucose test a year ago, his level was 111 mg/dL). He had been advised to consume a nutritional supplement (Ensure) three times a day, but after a day or two of poor oral intake his serum glucose level was 1,400 mg/dL and his glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was 8%. How should these findings be interpreted? Does the patient have recent-onset diabetes mellitus?
Original Publication Date: October 2001Product Description
An 83-year-old male patient of mine has no history of diabetes (during a random serum glucose test a year ago, his level was 111 mg/dL). He had been advised to consume a nutritional supplement (Ensure) three times a day, but after a day or two of poor oral intake his serum glucose level was 1,400 mg/dL and his glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was 8%. How should these findings be interpreted? Does the patient have recent-onset diabetes mellitus?
Original Publication Date: October 2001
How to interpret a sudden elevation in serum glucose level?
Product Description
An 83-year-old male patient of mine has no history of diabetes (during a random serum glucose test a year ago, his level was 111 mg/dL). He had been advised to consume a nutritional supplement (Ensure) three times a day, but after a day or two of poor oral intake his serum glucose level was 1,400 mg/dL and his glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was 8%. How should these findings be interpreted? Does the patient have recent-onset diabetes mellitus?Product Description
An 83-year-old male patient of mine has no history of diabetes (during a random serum glucose test a year ago, his level was 111 mg/dL). He had been advised to consume a nutritional supplement (Ensure) three times a day, but after a day or two of poor oral intake his serum glucose level was 1,400 mg/dL and his glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was 8%. How should these findings be interpreted? Does the patient have recent-onset diabetes mellitus?
How to interpret a sudden elevation in serum glucose level?
Product Description
Question: An 83-year-old male patient of mine has no history of diabetes (during a random serum glucose test a year ago, his level was 111 mg/dL). He had been advised to consume a nutritional supplement (Ensure) three times a day, but after a day or two of poor oral intake his serum glucose level was 1,400 mg/dL and his glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was 8%. How should these findings be interpreted? Does the patient have recent-onset diabetes mellitus?
How to interpret a sudden elevation in serum glucose level?
Product Description
Question: An 83-year-old male patient of mine has no history of diabetes (during a random serum glucose test a year ago, his level was 111 mg/dL). He had been advised to consume a nutritional supplement (Ensure) three times a day, but after a day or two of poor oral intake his serum glucose level was 1,400 mg/dL and his glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was 8%. How should these findings be interpreted? Does the patient have recent-onset diabetes mellitus?
How to interpret a sudden elevation in serum glucose level?
Product Description
Question: An 83-year-old male patient of mine has no history of diabetes (during a random serum glucose test a year ago, his level was 111 mg/dL). He had been advised to consume a nutritional supplement (Ensure) three times a day, but after a day or two of poor oral intake his serum glucose level was 1,400 mg/dL and his glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was 8%. How should these findings be interpreted? Does the patient have recent-onset diabetes mellitus?
How to interpret a sudden elevation in serum glucose level?
Product Description
Question: An 83-year-old male patient of mine has no history of diabetes (during a random serum glucose test a year ago, his level was 111 mg/dL). He had been advised to consume a nutritional supplement (Ensure) three times a day, but after a day or two of poor oral intake his serum glucose level was 1,400 mg/dL and his glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was 8%. How should these findings be interpreted? Does the patient have recent-onset diabetes mellitus?
How to interpret a sudden elevation in serum glucose level?
Product Description
Question: An 83-year-old male patient of mine has no history of diabetes (during a random serum glucose test a year ago, his level was 111 mg/dL). He had been advised to consume a nutritional supplement (Ensure) three times a day, but after a day or two of poor oral intake his serum glucose level was 1,400 mg/dL and his glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was 8%. How should these findings be interpreted? Does the patient have recent-onset diabetes mellitus?
How to interpret a sudden elevation in serum glucose level?
Product Description
Question: An 83-year-old male patient of mine has no history of diabetes (during a random serum glucose test a year ago, his level was 111 mg/dL). He had been advised to consume a nutritional supplement (Ensure) three times a day, but after a day or two of poor oral intake his serum glucose level was 1,400 mg/dL and his glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was 8%. How should these findings be interpreted? Does the patient have recent-onset diabetes mellitus?
How to interpret a sudden elevation in serum glucose level?
Product Description
Question: An 83-year-old male patient of mine has no history of diabetes (during a random serum glucose test a year ago, his level was 111 mg/dL). He had been advised to consume a nutritional supplement (Ensure) three times a day, but after a day or two of poor oral intake his serum glucose level was 1,400 mg/dL and his glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was 8%. How should these findings be interpreted? Does the patient have recent-onset diabetes mellitus?
How to interpret a sudden elevation in serum glucose level?
Product Description
Question: An 83-year-old male patient of mine has no history of diabetes (during a random serum glucose test a year ago, his level was 111 mg/dL). He had been advised to consume a nutritional supplement (Ensure) three times a day, but after a day or two of poor oral intake his serum glucose level was 1,400 mg/dL and his glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was 8%. How should these findings be interpreted? Does the patient have recent-onset diabetes mellitus?

