In this article we will describe how you test for prediabetes. First of all, some basics.
Prediabetes (or sometimes called borderline diabetes), is when your body starts to show signs a raised blood glucose (sugar). You won’t have any symptoms with pre-diabetes and your blood sugar levels can even be normal or near to normal.
Prediabetes is a ‘warning-shot’ for diabetes. You need to pay attention to it, and respond to it.
This involves lifestyle change, and if overweight, you need to lose weight, and keep it down.
Type 2 diabetes isn’t a sudden thing that happens overnight. It develops over time. You go from normal sugar control to pre-diabetes to diabetes (and back).
How can you know if you are prediabetic without any symptoms?
The main way we can tell if you have prediabetes is by doing a blood test for something called HbA1c. Sugar in your blood sticks to some of the haemoglobin in your red blood cells. Higher blood sugar means you have more glucose stuck to haemoglobin.
This ‘sugary haemoglobin’ is called HbA1c. How much HbA1c you have can tell us your average blood sugar levels in the last 3 months.
If you are prediabetic then you’ll have higher than normal HbA1c levels, but below diabetic levels (see below).
Blood glucose in prediabetes (and diabetes)
HbA1C in prediabetes (and diabetes)
In this article we have described how you test for prediabetes. Remember its a warning shot. You need to do something. This involves lifestyle change, and if overweight, you need to lose weight, and keep it down.