Corresponding Urine Sugar with 1 hr. ABF
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Corresponding Urine Sugar with 1 hr. ABF

Introduction to 1 hr. ABF Test Understanding Blood Glucose Levels Relationship Between Blood Sugar and Urine Sugar Importance of Monitoring Urine Sugar Levels Interpreting Results: Normal vs. Abnormal Factors Affecting Urine Sugar Levels Clinical Implications and Patient Management Case Studies: Applying Knowledge in Practice Future Directions in Monitoring Blood Sugar Q&A: Addressing Common Concerns

The Ibn Sina Trust
Praava Health
Dr Lal PathLabs
Omnicare Diagnostic Limited
Thyrocare Bangladesh Ltd
Brac Healthcare
Popular Diagnostic Centre Ltd
JG Healthcare
200
250
20% OFF
Sample Type
urine
Fasting Required
No
Description

This refers to the measurement of sugar levels in the urine following a 1-hour postprandial or after-meal blood sugar test (ABF test). The purpose of this test is to assess how well the body is able to regulate blood sugar levels after consuming a meal. The corresponding urine sugar levels provide additional information about glucose metabolism and can help in diagnosing conditions such as diabetes.

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How our test process works!

Step 1

Sample Collection

Vaccinated Phlebotomists collects from syringe in the barcoded vials

Step 2

Sample Storage

Only vaccinated phelbos are assigned orders

Step 3

High Tech Facility

Lab ingests the sample into processing machines which are 100% automated

Step 4

Accurate Digital Reports

The reports are generated by the processing machines and clinically correlated by doctors

Overview

Overview:

  • Urine Sugar Test: Measures the presence of glucose in the urine. It is a quick screening tool but less accurate than blood glucose tests.
  • 1-Hour ABF Blood Sugar Test: Measures blood glucose levels 1 hour after a meal (breakfast). It helps evaluate postprandial glucose metabolism.
Risk assessment

Positive Urine Sugar + High ABF Blood Sugar:

  • Diabetes Mellitus: Poor glucose control.
  • Prediabetes: Early stage; reversible with lifestyle modifications.
  • Gestational Diabetes: If seen in pregnant women.

Negative Urine Sugar + High ABF:

  • Postprandial hyperglycemia in early metabolic issues.

Positive Urine Sugar + Normal ABF:

  • Rare; could suggest renal glycosuria (benign or renal pathology).

 

Ranges

 Urine Sugar:

  • Normal: Negative (No glucose detected).
  • Abnormal: Glucose present (glycosuria) may indicate hyperglycemia.

1-Hour ABF Blood Sugar:

  • Normal: 90–140 mg/dL.
  • Pre-diabetic: 141–199 mg/dL.
  • Diabetic: ≥200 mg/dL.
Test result interpretation

 Urine Sugar:

  • Negative: Normal; body is effectively managing blood sugar.
  • Positive: Indicates blood glucose levels >180 mg/dL (renal threshold exceeded), suggesting potential diabetes, kidney issues, or other metabolic concerns.

 1-Hour ABF:

  • <140 mg/dL: Normal glucose metabolism.
  • 140–199 mg/dL: Impaired glucose tolerance (prediabetes).
  • ≥200 mg/dL: Indicates possible diabetes; warrants further testing (e.g., OGTT, HbA1c).

 

Sample types

 Urine Sugar: Random urine sample (morning preferred for consistency).

1-Hour ABF: Blood sample (venous or capillary) collected 1 hour after breakfast.

Frequently Asked Question