June 2016 Moms

Glucose Test

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Re: Glucose Test

  • zanaerob1 said:

    I'm really confused about all these posts about being told to drink the stuff on the way into the office, and particularly eating breakfast.

    In Australia a GTT requires you to be fasted, they take a fasting blood sugar level, then get you to drink the drink, then check your blood sugar again at 1 hour and 2 hours. This is how this test has been validated to check for GD.

    If you drink the drink on the way in, you can't have a fasting BSL taken. And if you eat breakfast the test is useless. It's supposed to check your response to a specific amount of glucose at a specific time after eating it. If you've eaten beforehand there's no way to know what time you ate or how much extra glucose you've had, which makes the test useless?

    They tell you that you can eat protein - eggs, for example, before the test but nothing with carbs or sugar.

    When I did it, I had to drink the stuff there, but they didn't draw blood before the test. I only did the one hour test.
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  • I had the lemon-lime flavor. It was like warm, not bad at all. I can "chug" so I just went ahead and downed it within about 15 seconds or so.
  • @zanaerob1 that's how it's given at my OB's practice. They skip the one hour test, and all women just take the three hour test right off the bat. I was also instructed not to eat for twelve hours before arriving for my test so they could get my fasting draw. I remember thinking it was torture to make a pregnant woman fast that long. That was worse than drinking the sweet drink, in my opinion.
  • Oh right. We don't do that test anymore in Australia. Everyone just does the full fasting test. Just different systems I guess.
  • I went early for my test because of family history. They gave my the orange one thats all they had and it was so gross I almost got sick lol. I had to drink it infant of them then wait an hour and they took my blood and told me they would call me if I had abnormal results which they never did so I'm assuming everything is fine! I had eggs for breakfast, my doctor told me eat protein, avoid carbs and fruits. 
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  • My midwife has the option for the glucose drink or an equivalent amount of jellybeans, which I thought was interesting as I had never heard about that before. In theory I suppose any meal eaten in quick enough succession that contains the required amount of sugar would work, but there isn't any scientific research using other food options (aside from, apparently, jellybeans).
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  • zanaerob1 said:
    I'm really confused about all these posts about being told to drink the stuff on the way into the office, and particularly eating breakfast. In Australia a GTT requires you to be fasted, they take a fasting blood sugar level, then get you to drink the drink, then check your blood sugar again at 1 hour and 2 hours. This is how this test has been validated to check for GD. If you drink the drink on the way in, you can't have a fasting BSL taken. And if you eat breakfast the test is useless. It's supposed to check your response to a specific amount of glucose at a specific time after eating it. If you've eaten beforehand there's no way to know what time you ate or how much extra glucose you've had, which makes the test useless?
    I may be wrong, but this sounds exactly like the test I took 5 years ago when pregnant with DS. It was in Florida and it was the only glucose test I took. I have been equally confused by this discussion, though I am now excited that this time around, in NC, the test may only involve one blood draw (the worst part of the whole thing, IMO).
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