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Critical Crazy
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Many medical devices are calibrated by barometric pressure.
For my equipment including any blood testing devices, I calibrate by two barometric pressure measuring devices in the Pulmonary lab as well as a check with the local authorized weather reporting agency to ensure accuracy.
Right, but finger stick instant check units are not laboratory instruments. The only option most finger stick units have is to put in the cal strip which calibrates the unit to a particular batch of test strips. There is no option to calibrate based on barometric pressure. Thinking in terms of chemistry and physics, I'm not getting how the measurement of a nonvolatile like glucose would be significantly affected by barometric pressure. I'd think that humidity and temp would have much larger effects! Anyways, altitude screwing up finger stick units it certainly isn't a worry that I've ever heard before living up high (and we talk about altitude affects all the time). Maybe I need to research how blood glucose is measured by these devices. It does make me wonder, does patient hydration level or crit have a significant affect? Those are two things affected by short and long term exposure to higher altitudes.
I'd be more worried that at extremely high altitudes (above 18K) you might have units failing as tiny air bubbles trapped in the ICs when they were manufactured at sea level expand stressing and fracturing the interconnects (most consumer electronics are guaranteed to about 10K for this reason, but seem to work above that without issue that I've ever seen).
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