Glycosylated Hemoglobin, also called
hemoglobin A1C or
HbA1c, is a medical
lab test, used to monitor
Diabetes Mellitus.
It measures the percentage of hemoglobin A molecules that have a glucose moiety attached.
These molecules can be separated from normal HbA by electrophoresis into 3 fractions called HbA1a, HbA1b, and HbA1c; normally only HbA1c is quantitated.
The percent of glycosylation is proportional both to time and to concentration of glucose in the blood.
Although minor variations occur from lab to lab, the HbA1c correlates to the average blood sugar over the past three months (which is the mean lifespan of a red blood cell.)
HbA1c Avg. Glucose
14 awful 380
13 340
12 310
11 poor 280
10 240
9 210
8 180
7 fair 140
6 excellent 110
5 80
These values are used to drive the therapy regimen; if the HbA1c is above 6.5, adjustments should be made. It is checked every three to four months.
Incidentally, a diagnosis of DM is made if a fasting blood glucose is 126 gm/dl or greater; the HbA1c is not used for diagnosis.