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HI ,

Did he happen to mention anything about whether these figures quoted are

based on capillary (fingerprick) or vein readings? There is quite a big diff

in the 2, because fingerprick (capillary) readings are 'diluted' with plasma

etc, so I think these come out as about 30% lower reading wise than they

would if a vein test instead.

Hopkins originally used ketone meters that were already calibrated to

allow for the difference bwteen the 2 diff methods of sampling (I emailed

the author of one of their first papers on the bhb readings a couple of yrs

ago) but I'm not sure whether that would still apply in this latest info Dr

Freeman has supplied here??

Blood Ketones and Net Carbs

> I e-mailed Freeman to see what the up to date view of blood

> ketone testing is and his reply stated:

>

> As far as blood ketones go, that is the logical way to manage the

> diet.

> We would no longer manage a diabetic with measurements of urine

> glucose, although that is the way we used to do it. However, we have

> found that current ketone meters are unreliable above 4 mmol. We think

> that a child should be above 4, and some as much as 8mmol. Until

> companies see virtue (money) in making a meter which is reliable in

> that

> range, I'm not sure of the usefulness of the meters.

> With that said, go ahead and use it and make your own correlations of

> blood and urine ketones and seizures as well as illness. You can have

> a

> study of one person.

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HI ,

Did he happen to mention anything about whether these figures quoted are

based on capillary (fingerprick) or vein readings? There is quite a big diff

in the 2, because fingerprick (capillary) readings are 'diluted' with plasma

etc, so I think these come out as about 30% lower reading wise than they

would if a vein test instead.

Hopkins originally used ketone meters that were already calibrated to

allow for the difference bwteen the 2 diff methods of sampling (I emailed

the author of one of their first papers on the bhb readings a couple of yrs

ago) but I'm not sure whether that would still apply in this latest info Dr

Freeman has supplied here??

Blood Ketones and Net Carbs

> I e-mailed Freeman to see what the up to date view of blood

> ketone testing is and his reply stated:

>

> As far as blood ketones go, that is the logical way to manage the

> diet.

> We would no longer manage a diabetic with measurements of urine

> glucose, although that is the way we used to do it. However, we have

> found that current ketone meters are unreliable above 4 mmol. We think

> that a child should be above 4, and some as much as 8mmol. Until

> companies see virtue (money) in making a meter which is reliable in

> that

> range, I'm not sure of the usefulness of the meters.

> With that said, go ahead and use it and make your own correlations of

> blood and urine ketones and seizures as well as illness. You can have

> a

> study of one person.

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When your children have Venous blood work done-do 2 things

!. do a finger stick and check results with the lab

2. Use the venous sample and then check the level on your machine

Compare the results venous & capillary

But you are also checking the venous in your monitor against the lab

And seeing what the capillary is vs venous

This will help you get the numbers to strive for during fine-tuning

Sandi

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