A1C Chart

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Questions & answers

So the old method has an A1c of 6% at an average blood glucose of 135mg/Dl, and using the new formula will give you 126mg/DL, and a 7% A1c now equals a eAG of 154mg/DL instead of 170mg/DL.A1c is Changing to Average Mean Blood Glucose. A1cAverage Blood Glucose mg/dL.eAG (New) mg/dL5%100976%1351267%1701548%2051834 more rows • Jun 10, 2008
HbA1c4.04.3Glucose8795HbA1c6.06.3Glucose113121HbA1c7.07.315 more rows
Equations used when Estimated average glucose(mg/dL) is entered: A1C(%) = (Estimated average glucose(mg/dL) + 46.7) / 28.7.
For functionally independent older adults, the IDF recommends an A1C goal of 7–7.5%, whereas for functionally dependent, frail patients or patients with dementia, an A1C goal of 7–8% is recommended.
A normal A1C level is below 5.7%, a level of 5.7% to 6.4% indicates prediabetes, and a level of 6.5% or more indicates diabetes. Within the 5.7% to 6.4% prediabetes range, the higher your A1C, the greater your risk is for developing type 2 diabetes.Your A1C Result. A1C %eAG mg/dL71548183921210240
Fasting blood sugar test In general: Less than 100 mg/dL (5.6 mmol/L ) is normal. 100 to 125 mg/dL (5.6 to 6.9 mmol/L ) is diagnosed as prediabetes. 126 mg/dL (7.0 mmol/L ) or higher on two separate tests is diagnosed as diabetes.