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Glucose is a type of sugar found
in fruits and many other foods, it is the main source of energy used by the
body. Most of the sugars and starches (carbohydrates) a person eats are turned
into glucose. The body can use glucose for energy or store it in the liver
and muscles as glycogen.
A insulin helps the body use and control the amount of
glucose in the blood. The pancreas produces insulin and releases it into the
blood when the amount of glucose in the blood rises. People who do not produce
enough insulin or cannot use it properly have high blood sugar levels and
develop diabetes. Normally, blood glucose levels increase slightly after you eat
a meal. An increase in blood glucose causes the
pancreas to release insulin, which causes glucose to enter cells, thereby preventing blood glucose
levels from getting too high.
The oral glucose tolerance test
measures the body's ability to use glucose. After a person drinks a specific
amount of glucose, its levels are measured in blood samples over a period
of several hours. Normally, blood glucose levels peak within an hour and then
begin to drop.
This test is done on blood samples
taken from a vein.
Oral Glucose Tolerance Test Results
Normal
Normal values may vary from lab to lab.
Glucose tolerance
screening test (for gestational diabetes)
50
grams (g) of glucose
1 hour:
less than 140
milligrams per deciliter (mg/dL)
Glucose tolerance diagnostic test (for
gestational diabetes)
100 g of glucose
Fasting:
less than 95 mg/dL
1-hour:
less than 180 mg/dL
2-hour:
less than 155 mg/dL
3-hour:
less than 140 mg/dL
Glucose tolerance diagnostic test (for
a nonpregnant person)
75 g of glucose
Fasting:
less than 109 mg/dL
1-hour:
less than 180 mg/dL
2-hour:
less than 140 mg/dL
Greater than normal values may mean
For a pregnant woman, gestational diabetes may be present if results of the screening test (using 50 grams
of glucose) are higher than 140 mg/dL. In this case, a complete glucose tolerance
diagnostic test (using 100 grams of glucose) should be done.
For a pregnant woman, the diagnostic
test may indicate gestational
diabetes if two or more of the following results occur:
The fasting blood glucose value is greater
than 95 mg/dL.
The 1-hour value is greater than
180 mg/dL.
The 2-hour value is greater than
155 mg/dL.
The 3-hour value is greater than
140 mg/dL.
For a nonpregnant person, higher
than normal blood glucose levels usually indicate diabetes. The higher the
level, the more likely it is that the person has diabetes. The American Diabetes
Association considers diabetes to be present if:
The fasting glucose level is above
126 mg/dL on two occasions.
A random glucose level is above 200 mg/dL and signs or symptoms of diabetes are
present.
At least two glucose tolerance diagnostic
test values are above 200 mg/dL. If the results of the glucose tolerance diagnostic
test are high, the test may be repeated on a different day to confirm the
diagnosis. A fasting value between 109 mg/dL and 126 mg/dL or a 2-hour blood
glucose level between 140 and 200 mg/dL is borderline. This result may be
called “impaired glucose tolerance” and indicates that a person
is at high risk for developing diabetes.
Other conditions that can cause
high blood glucose levels: severe stress, some medications, Cushing's syndrome,
acromegaly, pheochromocytoma, or hemochromatosis.
Lower than normal values may mean
Glucose levels that fall below
40 mg/dL may indicate a tumor in the pancreas that produces abnormally high amounts of insulin (called an insulinoma) or
a problem (such as sprue) that prevents the intestines from absorbing the nutrients from food.
Other
causes of very low glucose
levels include Addison's
disease, an underactive thyroid gland or pituitary gland, or severe liver disease
(cirrhosis).