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Annals of Internal Medicine, 1982
Excerpt To the editor: The overview of the ambulatory treatment of insulin-dependent diabetic patients by Felig and Bergman (1) includes a review of the methods currently available for the measurem...
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Excerpt To the editor: The overview of the ambulatory treatment of insulin-dependent diabetic patients by Felig and Bergman (1) includes a review of the methods currently available for the measurem...
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Archives of Internal Medicine, 1927
The degree of hyperglycemia that follows the administration of glucose is commonly used as a measure of the efficiency of the sugarutilizing mechanism of the body. The method ordinarily employed in performing this test is to measure the concentration of sugar in the blood at intervals after the ingestion of a certain amount of glucose.
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The degree of hyperglycemia that follows the administration of glucose is commonly used as a measure of the efficiency of the sugarutilizing mechanism of the body. The method ordinarily employed in performing this test is to measure the concentration of sugar in the blood at intervals after the ingestion of a certain amount of glucose.
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BLOOD SUGAR VERSUS URINE SUGAR
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1939If one reviews the literature on diabetes, especially the mode of diagnosis, the prognosis and the guidance of its treatment, one will find that the great majority of physicians depend much on the chemical analysis of the urine for sugar (dextrose).
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BLOOD SUGAR VERSUS URINARY SUGAR
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1939To the Editor:— InThe JournalJune 17 and 24 appears a paper entitled "Blood Sugar versus Urinary Sugar" by Dr. Anthony Sindoni Jr. The author states that: In view of the high incidence of disturbed carbohydrate metabolism frequently escaping detection by examination of the urine for sugar and the serious consequences resulting therefrom, blood sugar ...
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Archives of Internal Medicine, 1923
The Problem. —Carbohydrate tolerance may be studied in terms of either glycosuria or glycemia. Testing the urine for sugar is still of value for physicians who have small opportunity to take blood, as in insurance work, or to have the blood analyzed, owing to remoteness from a laboratory. Blood sugar determinations, on the other hand, have proved more
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The Problem. —Carbohydrate tolerance may be studied in terms of either glycosuria or glycemia. Testing the urine for sugar is still of value for physicians who have small opportunity to take blood, as in insurance work, or to have the blood analyzed, owing to remoteness from a laboratory. Blood sugar determinations, on the other hand, have proved more
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