Notas de rodapé
1. O teste de ponta de dedo é necessário se as leituras não corresponderem aos sintomas ou expectativas.
2. Haak, Thomas., et al. Flash glucose-sensing technology as a replacement for blood glucose monitoring for the management of insulin-treated type 2 diabetes: a multicenter, open-label randomized controlled trial. Diabetes Therapy 8.1 (2017): 55-73.
3. Evans, Mark, et al."The Impact of Flash Glucose Monitoring on Glycaemic Control as Measured by HbA1c: a Meta-analysis of Clinical Trials and Real-world Observational Studies."Diabetes Therapy 11, no. 1 (January 2020): 83-95.https://doi.org/10.1007/s13300-019-00720-0.
4. Chart Review Studies to Determine the Effectiveness of Flash Glucose Monitoring on HbA1c in Adults with Type 2 Diabetes."Diabetes Therapy 11, no.1 (January 2020): 279-291. https://- doi.org/10.1007/s13300-019-00741-9.
5. Bolinder, Jan., et al. Novel glucose-sensing technology and hypoglycaemia in type 1 diabetes: a multicentre, non-masked, randomised controlled trial. The Lancet 388.10057 (2016): 2254-2263.
6. O sensor FreeStyle Libre faz automaticamente uma leitura de glicose a cada 1 minuto armazenando um resultado a cada 15 minutos, acumulando até 8 horas de dados de glicose que são capturados pelo leitor ou smartphone com o aplicativo FreeStyle LibreLink instalado a cada scan.
7. Para ter um panorama glicêmico completo ao longo dos últimos três meses, o sensor deve ser substituído a cada 14 dias e o sensor deve ser escaneado no mínimo uma vez a cada 8 horas.
8. Fokkert M, van Dijk P, Edens M, et al. Improved well-being and decreased disease burden after 1-year use of flash glucose monitoring (FLARE-NL4). BMJ Open Diab Res Care 2019;7:e000809. doi:10.1136/bmjdrc-2019-000809.
ADC-70894 v2.0 04/23.