Background: Continuous glucose monitoring by means of optical glucose sensors would allow patients with diabetes to check their metabolic control to their convenience. In an earlier study, we showed that noninvasive glucose monitoring is feasible for rapid changes in blood glucose by means of measuring the scattering coefficient of human skin. In this study, we investigated whether also slower changes in blood glucose, this time induced by an oral glucose load, can also be monitored by this approach.
Methods: Five healthy subjects and 13 patients with type 2 diabetes have been given a 75-g oral glucose load. Portable noninvasive systems were used to measure the skin tissue scattering coefficient. For this purpose, two optical sensor heads were attached directly to the skin of each volunteer. Light was applied to the skin and the reflected light intensity was registered.
Results: In 8 of 10 measurements, correlation of changes in scattering coefficient with changes in glycemia was acceptable. In 19 of 26 measurements (73%) of patients with type 2 diabetes the observed changes in the scattering coefficient also correlated in acceptable manner. The accordance between the simultaneous measurements of the two sensor heads was acceptable in 13 of 18 volunteers and patients studied. There were virtually no differences in the quality of the measurements between healthy volunteers and patients with diabetes.
Conclusions: This study shows that also slow changes in blood glucose induced by an oral glucose load can be monitored by registration of scattering coefficient changes. It remains to be elucidated why this has not been possible in all experiments.