Last night, at around 10:45 PM, I decided to test my INR. Being able to test at any time, day or night, is one of the nice things about self-testing.
In the past few months, I've tested with the Coag-Sense and CoaguChek XS simultaneously.
It's been hot here in the San Fernando Valley -- in the high 90s or low 100s. I set up the two meters that I planned to test with, and when I inserted a test strip into the Coag-Sense, I got a temperature error. What this obviously meant to me was that the meter or strip's temperature was too high to perform an accurate test. (When you're waiting for your meter to get ready, it's heating the strip to body temperature so that it can approximate what happens with YOUR blood when it's clotting. I understood the thermal problem, and left this particular test for the morning, when it's cooler.
I decided to give the CoaguChek XS a try even though it was too hot for the Coag-Sense. The CoaguChek XS worked with no complaints. Both meters were stored in the same room and were exposed to the same environment. I realize that the test mechanism for each meter is different from that for the other, but I am still a bit surprised that the XS had no issues with the ambient temperature.
FWIW - I used the same strip that I opened last night to test this morning. With the Coag-Sense, this is permissible -- I didn't have to throw away the opened strip.
Have any of you run into YOUR XS or InRatio not wanting to run a test because it was too hot?
In the past few months, I've tested with the Coag-Sense and CoaguChek XS simultaneously.
It's been hot here in the San Fernando Valley -- in the high 90s or low 100s. I set up the two meters that I planned to test with, and when I inserted a test strip into the Coag-Sense, I got a temperature error. What this obviously meant to me was that the meter or strip's temperature was too high to perform an accurate test. (When you're waiting for your meter to get ready, it's heating the strip to body temperature so that it can approximate what happens with YOUR blood when it's clotting. I understood the thermal problem, and left this particular test for the morning, when it's cooler.
I decided to give the CoaguChek XS a try even though it was too hot for the Coag-Sense. The CoaguChek XS worked with no complaints. Both meters were stored in the same room and were exposed to the same environment. I realize that the test mechanism for each meter is different from that for the other, but I am still a bit surprised that the XS had no issues with the ambient temperature.
FWIW - I used the same strip that I opened last night to test this morning. With the Coag-Sense, this is permissible -- I didn't have to throw away the opened strip.
Have any of you run into YOUR XS or InRatio not wanting to run a test because it was too hot?