For the
non-critical patient, I agree with the other posters - whatever the difference is, it isn't relevant clinically.
The issue gets a little more complicated, of course, when the patient is really sick. We see a lot of people working hard to get a finger stick on the cardiac arrest patient, for example. It has been found, however, that
such results were often wrong, either falsely high or falsely low. There is also some data out there in the potential errors when checking the FSBG on a septic, hypotensive patient, but I can't find those references anywhere in this cluttered Mac.
I covered some of this in a review I wrote earlier this year,
Using Dextrose in Cardiac Arrest.
(For those who don't want to click, here's the summary. Hypoglycemia was added to ACLS as one of the "
Hs" in 2005, and then removed in 2010. Both times there was apparently no new evidence for either decision!)