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Glucose (Post-Prandial)
Blood
Glucose (Post-Prandial)
Also known as: PPG, Postprandial Glucose
COMMON RANGE
0 – 140
mg/dL
0
154
W
World Health Organization
Adult
↗
See all sources ↓
CONVERT & COMPARE
mg/dL
=
3.89
mmol/L
Reference ranges across 10+ sources
Adult reference ranges from 1 entries across 1 named sources, shown in mg/dL. Compare side-by-side.
SOURCE
SEX
AGE
RANGE
VISUAL
CITE
W
World Health Organization
All
≥18y
0 – 140 mg/dL
↗
W
World Health Organization
All · ≥18y
↗
0 – 140 mg/dL
About Glucose (Post-Prandial)
A blood glucose test measures the glucose levels in your blood. Glucose is a type of sugar. It is your body's main source of energy. It comes from the food you eat. A hormone called insulin helps move glucose from your bloodstream into your cells for use as energy. If you have too much or too little glucose in your blood, it may be a sign of a serious medical condition.
High blood glucose levels (hyperglycemia) may be a sign of prediabetes or diabetes. Prediabetes is a condition in which your blood glucose levels are higher than what is healthy for you, but not high enough to be considered diabetes. If you have diabetes, your body can't make insulin or can't use it as well as it should, or both. Too much glucose stays in your blood and doesn't reach your cells. This can cause glucose levels to get too high. If blood glucose isn't controlled, it can lead to serious, long-term health conditions, such as heart disease and nerve problems.
High blood glucose may also be caused by other conditions that can affect insulin or glucose levels in your blood, such as problems with your pancreas or adrenal glands, and side effects from certain medicines.
Low blood glucose levels (hypoglycemia) are often caused by certain diabetes medicines for type 1 diabetes or type 2 diabetes, including insulin. In people without diabetes, low blood glucose is much less common. It may be caused by certain medicines and conditions, such as some kidney or liver diseases. In rare cases, very low glucose can point to a tumor in the insulin-producing cells of the pancreas. Without treatment, severe low blood glucose can lead to major health problems, including seizures and brain damage.
Main source: MedlinePlus ↗
Useful for
As part of a routine checkup to screen for prediabetes and diabetes
To help diagnose the cause of symptoms that may mean your blood glucose is too high or too low
To monitor the side effects of certain long-term medicines that may affect blood glucose
To help diagnose and guide treatment for conditions that affect how your body handles sugar, such as diabetes and uncommon causes of low blood sugar
Main source: MedlinePlus ↗
Interpretation
The meaning of your test results will depend on which test you had, the results of other tests, and your medical history. Ask your provider what your test results say about your health.
In general, if your results show higher than normal glucose levels, it may mean you have or are at risk for getting diabetes. Prediabetes and diabetes are the most common causes of high glucose levels, though other conditions can also raise glucose.
If you have diabetes, glucose levels that are lower than normal for you may have a number of causes — talk with your provider about what's affecting your results.
For general wellness information only. Talk to a clinician about your specific results.
Main source: MedlinePlus ↗
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Related biomarkers
Often tested alongside glucose (post-prandial) or part of the same panel.
White Blood Cells (WBC)
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Red Blood Cells (RBC)
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Hemoglobin (Hgb)
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Hematocrit (Hct)
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Platelets (PLT)
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Mean Corpuscular Volume (MCV)
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Sources
W
World Health Organization
Last updated 2026-05-02
This page aggregates publicly available reference data and clinical information from Mayo Clinic Laboratories and other sources. For general wellness information only — not medical advice. For diagnosis or treatment of any condition, talk to a qualified clinician.
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