I've been able to get actual blood draws during the past two months, and have used my meter an hour or less before the blood draws so that I can compare the meter to the lab results.
My meter is consistently higher than the lab results - always within 30%, but always higher.
Up until a couple months ago, I haven't had the luxury of comparing meter results with blood draws (except for one time in 2010 that confirmed that my ProTime meter was an almost exact match). After I got the InRatio, I found that it was much easier to use than the ProTime, but now I'm not so sure of how close it correlates to actual lab values.
I was told by a tech specialist that for some people, some meters just don't work. The reagents in the strips doesn't work properly with the person's blood -- and results aren't as accurate as they are for other people.
My recent experience suggests that my InRatio results are ALWAYS higher than those from the lab, and seem to be telling me that, if I want to be in a range of 2.5-3.5, I should shoot for a 3.0 on my InRatio.
I'll be trying a new lot of strips soon, and see if the results are different for a new lot.
I'm wondering, though:
Have any of you had similar experience with your meter's reported INR CONSISTENTLY being higher (or, perhaps, lower) than a lab's reported INR?
Have any of you heard that the blood from some people doesn't work properly with a particular meter?
My meter is consistently higher than the lab results - always within 30%, but always higher.
Up until a couple months ago, I haven't had the luxury of comparing meter results with blood draws (except for one time in 2010 that confirmed that my ProTime meter was an almost exact match). After I got the InRatio, I found that it was much easier to use than the ProTime, but now I'm not so sure of how close it correlates to actual lab values.
I was told by a tech specialist that for some people, some meters just don't work. The reagents in the strips doesn't work properly with the person's blood -- and results aren't as accurate as they are for other people.
My recent experience suggests that my InRatio results are ALWAYS higher than those from the lab, and seem to be telling me that, if I want to be in a range of 2.5-3.5, I should shoot for a 3.0 on my InRatio.
I'll be trying a new lot of strips soon, and see if the results are different for a new lot.
I'm wondering, though:
Have any of you had similar experience with your meter's reported INR CONSISTENTLY being higher (or, perhaps, lower) than a lab's reported INR?
Have any of you heard that the blood from some people doesn't work properly with a particular meter?