Continuous glucose monitors were originally designed to help people with diabetes track and better manage their blood sugar (aka ‘blood glucose’). Nowadays, not everyone you see wearing one actually ...
At the 18th International Diabetes Federation Congress (IDF) symposium on "Insulin Delivery Devices and Glucose Sensors," [1] Theodor Koschinsky, MD, University of Dusseldorf, Germany, discussed the ...
It's a small device, but the hype around it is huge. The technology is called constant glucose monitoring, and companies that make it say it will transform the way you feel. But what do scientific ...
A quarter-size device that tracks the rise and fall of sugar in your blood is the latest source of hope — and hype — in the growing buzz around wearable health technology. Continuous glucose monitors, ...
In general, as someone without diabetes, you want your fasting blood sugar (when you haven’t eaten for at least eight hours) to be below 100 mg/dL. You want your spikes to be below 180 mg/dL, to lower ...
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the first-ever implantable continuous glucose monitoring system, the Eversense CGM (Senseonics), for people aged 18 years and older with diabetes ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. This image provided by Abbott’s Lingo division in July 2025, shows the Lingo wearable device for continuous glucose monitoring.