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Hemoglobin A1c (Glycated Hemoglobin) explained

A1c reflects average blood glucose over ~3 months, helping diagnose and monitor diabetes.

Varies by laboratory (LDT/CLIA; not FDA‑approved as a drug)

Hemoglobin A1c (Glycated Hemoglobin) helps treat

• Diabetes screening and monitoring
• Assessing therapy effectiveness
• Risk stratification


additional medications

• Related clinical evaluation and history
• Repeat testing to confirm abnormal results
• Additional targeted labs as recommended

medication risks

• False positives/negatives leading to unnecessary anxiety or missed diagnoses
• Privacy and insurance implications depending on results
• Pre‑analytical variables (fasting, meds) can affect accuracy

side effects

• Bruising or soreness at draw site
• Lightheadedness or fainting (rare)
• Infection at puncture site (very rare)

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FAQs

Q: Fasting?
A: Not required.

Q: What can skew results?
A: Hemoglobin variants, anemia, CKD can alter A1c accuracy.

Q: How often to check?
A: Every 3 months when adjusting treatment, per clinician.

Q: Diagnostic cutoffs?
A: Use guideline thresholds; labs provide reference ranges.

Q: Alternatives?
A: Fructosamine can be used when A1c is unreliable.

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