Glossary

Glucose & CGM glossary

Plain-English definitions of the continuous glucose monitoring and metabolic-health terms that show up across our guides. Educational only, not medical advice.

Dysglycemia

An umbrella term for abnormal glucose regulation that doesn't yet meet the threshold for diabetes — including impaired fasting glucose, impaired glucose tolerance, and high glucose variability.

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HbA1c

A blood test reflecting average glucose over roughly the prior 2–3 months, reported as a percentage. Useful, but it hides the day-to-day highs and lows that shape risk.

HbA1c vs CGM →

Estimated average glucose (eAG)

An HbA1c expressed on the everyday glucose scale (mg/dL or mmol/L), so it's easier to compare with a meter or CGM reading. Derived from the ADAG study formula.

Calculator →

Glucose Management Indicator (GMI)

An estimated, lab-like A1c calculated from the mean glucose a CGM measures over 14+ days. Because it comes from CGM data, GMI can differ from a blood HbA1c.

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Time in Range (TIR)

The percentage of time glucose stays within a target band (commonly 70–180 mg/dL) on a CGM. A target of >70% is common for many adults with diabetes.

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Glucose variability

How much glucose swings around its average, often measured as coefficient of variation (CV). High variability is linked to oxidative stress and is a target of good glucose control.

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Coefficient of variation (CV)

A measure of glucose variability: the standard deviation divided by the mean glucose. A CV at or below 36% is a commonly cited marker of stable glucose.

Dawn phenomenon

A natural early-morning rise in glucose driven by overnight hormones, often seen as a climb in the hours before waking on a CGM trace.

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Reactive hypoglycemia

A drop in glucose that occurs a few hours after eating, sometimes causing shakiness, sweating, or fatigue. CGM can help reveal the pattern.

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Prediabetes

Glucose that is higher than normal but below the diabetes threshold — one part of the broader dysglycemia spectrum, and often responsive to lifestyle change.

CGM for prediabetes →

Impaired fasting glucose (IFG)

A fasting glucose above the normal range but below the diabetes cutoff — one of the states grouped under prediabetes.

Impaired glucose tolerance (IGT)

Glucose that stays elevated too long after a glucose challenge (or a meal) — another form of prediabetes, and a marker of early insulin resistance.

Continuous glucose monitor (CGM)

A small wearable sensor that samples glucose throughout the day and night, producing a continuous trace rather than isolated finger-stick readings.

Ambulatory glucose profile (AGP)

A standardized one-page CGM report that overlays several days of glucose into a single daily picture, making patterns easier to read.

Hypoglycemia

Low blood glucose, commonly flagged below 70 mg/dL (3.9 mmol/L), with a more serious level below 54 mg/dL (3.0 mmol/L). Severe lows need prompt treatment.

Hyperglycemia

High blood glucose, commonly flagged above 180 mg/dL (10.0 mmol/L). Sustained highs over time contribute to complications.

Postprandial glucose

The glucose response after eating. Sharp post-meal spikes can occur even when fasting values and HbA1c look acceptable.

Glucotype

A metabolic phenotype defined by the shape of a person's glucose curve rather than an average — for example, stable, post-meal spiker, or variable.

Remote patient monitoring (RPM)

Clinically reviewing device data, such as CGM readings, between visits. Under Medicare it maps to specific CPT codes.

RPM billing →