Prediabetes is a borderline condition in which your blood sugar is
consistently high but not high enough to be considered diabetes. The
easiest way to determine if you have it is to get a simple blood test.
The most accurate one is the A1C test, which determines the percentage
of glucose (sugar) that's attached to the oxygen-carrying protein
hemoglobin in your blood.
"It's a good indicator of what your blood sugar has been like for the
past two or three months," says Loren Wissner Greene, MD, a clinical
professor and endocrinologist at NYU Langone Medical Center. A score of
5.9 and below is considered normal. Anything between 5.7 and 6.4 is
considered prediabetes, and 6.4 and above is full-blown diabetes. (Eat
to lower your cholesterol and blood pressure—and lose up to 25 pounds in
the process—with
0 maoni: