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plasmaglucose

Plasmaglucose, more commonly called plasma glucose, is the concentration of glucose in the plasma—the liquid portion of blood from which cells and clotting factors have been separated. It is a key biomarker of carbohydrate metabolism and is routinely used in diagnosing and monitoring conditions such as diabetes and hypoglycemia. The term plasmaglucose is sometimes encountered in older or nonstandard texts but refers to the same measurement as plasma glucose.

Measurement and units

Plasma glucose is reported in milligrams per deciliter (mg/dL) or millimoles per liter (mmol/L). Common clinical

Diagnostic thresholds (typical criteria)

- Fasting plasma glucose: normal <100 mg/dL (5.6 mmol/L); impaired fasting glucose 100–125 mg/dL (5.6–6.9 mmol/L); diabetes

- 2-hour plasma glucose after a 75 g OGTT: normal <140 mg/dL (7.8 mmol/L); impaired glucose tolerance

- Random plasma glucose ≥200 mg/dL (11.1 mmol/L) with classic hyperglycemia symptoms can indicate diabetes.

Clinical use and interpretation

Plasma glucose informs diagnosis of diabetes and prediabetes, guides treatment decisions, and helps monitor glycemic control

Measurement methods

Laboratories commonly use enzymatic assays (glucose oxidase or hexokinase) to quantify plasma glucose. Point-of-care devices are

tests
include
fasting
plasma
glucose
(FPG),
random
plasma
glucose,
and
the
2-hour
plasma
glucose
(2h-PG)
after
an
oral
glucose
tolerance
test
(OGTT).
Point-of-care
devices
often
estimate
plasma
glucose
from
capillary
blood,
with
values
that
may
differ
slightly
from
laboratory
measurements.
≥126
mg/dL
(7.0
mmol/L)
on
two
occasions.
140–199
mg/dL
(7.8–11.0
mmol/L);
diabetes
≥200
mg/dL
(11.1
mmol/L).
in
individuals
with
diabetes.
It
is
affected
by
recent
meals,
stress,
illness,
and
medications,
and
pre-analytical
factors
such
as
sample
handling
and
glycolysis
can
influence
results.
useful
for
rapid
monitoring
but
may
require
confirmatory
laboratory
testing
for
diagnostic
purposes.