Dexcom G6 Transmitter Calibration Issues #3690
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Hi, I know the issues I'm experiencing with my calibrations not working are not an issue with the excellent xDrip+ and more likely the transmitter as I can see the calibration accepted by transmitter events in the logs and I've checked and I'm running in Native mode. I do have a quick question though as Dexcom have stated that the transmitter does not accept calibrations, so my question is does the Dexcom G6 app run in Native mode like xDrip+ or might it use a different mode and it is the app that stores and manages the calibrations entered? |
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What do you mean by Dexcom having stated that the transmitter does not accept calibrations? Calibration, whether it comes from the receiver or Dexcom app or xDrip, is submitted to the G6 transmitter. The transmitter deals with the calibration. In the early days, G6 transmitters transmitted raw values the same as G5. That was when xDrip could use a G6 in non-native mode and handle calibrations itself. But, G6 introduced the concept of factory calibration, which addressed the impact of the immune system on the behavior of the sensor. This capability never existed in G5. Using an old G6 in non-native mode dismissed factory calibration, a major evolution over G5. Therefore, it was not a very good idea to use a G6 in non-native mode. Please explain if I have misunderstood your question. |
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Hi Navid200, Yes you have answered my question perfectly. I have a G6 transmitter that was working fine for a month or so, normally it runs a little high when a new sensor is inserted and I have to calibrate once or twice the next day and it's perfect from then. However, after starting a new sensor, it is about 5 - 7 mmols too high, I've tried to calibrate it (within 20%) and the error log says calibration accepted but it is having zero effect on the subsequent readings. Today is my 4th day of the sensor and every calibration has had zero effect. Every 5 min the reading is ~5mmol above what is recorded by my BGM (normally once settled they are largely the same). I even had a minor hypo where my G6 showed 5mmol (alarm went off) and my BGM showed 1.2mmol. I phoned Dexcom in Aus (AMSL) and was told it was definitely a sensor issue (ok, being ~5mmol to high maybe) but the issue is that the transmitter isn't handling the calibration event (usually the readings align / move / gprah over the next few readings). Suddenly though there is zero effect of calibrations to correct high values (even when my blood readings are stable and when I even tried calibrating down by 2mmol to be within 20%). I would be happy even with a 3mmol correction tbh, but 5mmol is too high for me. When I said the issue was the transmitter not reacting to the calibrations they said categorically the sensor handled this. I argued and said it can't be as the sensor doesn't have a chip in it, they then said the transmitter does not do anything with the calibrations and that it is all done by the app and I needed to restart my app. Having become acquainted with the event logs on xDrip+ and was aware of the calibration being sent to the transmitter event I highly doubted that so thought I'd seek understanding from you guys, but clearly they are talking nonsense. I'm just trying to get a better understanding for the likely fight I'm going to have with the technician (who still hasn't called back) for a transmitter replacement. Btw, I'm aware of over calibration, calibration errors, calibrating within 20% and calibration confusion, my graph looks perfect and is graphing every 5 mins, the sole issue I'm having is every reading is ~5mmols too high and the calibrations I'm providing, being accepted by the transmitter are having zero effect. Sorry for the long response, thought you might appreciate the detail. |
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What do you mean by Dexcom having stated that the transmitter does not accept calibrations?
Calibration, whether it comes from the receiver or Dexcom app or xDrip, is submitted to the G6 transmitter. The transmitter deals with the calibration.
In the early days, G6 transmitters transmitted raw values the same as G5. That was when xDrip could use a G6 in non-native mode and handle calibrations itself. But, G6 introduced the concept of factory calibration, which addressed the impact of the immune system on the behavior of the sensor. This capability never existed in G5. Using an old G6 in non-native mode dismissed factory calibration, a major evolution over G5. Therefore, it was not a very …