According to the manual it means that you have a calibration or test strip error. You should try re-calibrating, and checking the date on the test strips. The manual also suggests checking the date in the meter. If the meter has been calibrated to the box of strips, and the strips are not expired, you should call customer service for more assistance.
Assuming glucose-6-phosphate is in equilibrium with glucose and phosphate, the equilibrium concentration of glucose-6-phosphate would also be 5mM. This is based on the principle of mass action and the equilibrium constant of the reaction between glucose, phosphate, and glucose-6-phosphate.
Six. The chemical formula for glucose is C6H12O6, and so it has six carbon, twelve hydrogen, and six oxygen atoms.
Yes, they have 6 carbons.
Hexokinase
C6H12O6. 6 atoms of carbon, 12 atoms of hydrogen, 6 atoms of oxygen.
Check the date on your strips. Chances are they are expired and the meter knows this.
This indicates that the test strips are expired.
On Mission Xtra - 2009 Native Americans 1-6 was released on: USA: 7 March 2009
A meter is 100 centimeters. Hence 6% of a meter is 6 centimeters.
pH meters are precise to +/- 0.1 to +/- 0.01 pH unit (+/- 6 to +/- 0.6 mV) qith a full-meter scale of 14 pH units (about 840 mV)
The precision is determined by the POSITION of the number 6 - NOT its value.
C6H12O6 (glucose) ... That formula means there are 6 Carbon Atoms present (C), 12 Hydrogen (H) and 6 Oxygen in one molecule of Glucose.
1 meter bt 6 feet = 1 meter x (6x 0.3048) meter = 6 x0.3048 sq. meter = 1.8288 sq meter
No, it does not.
6 metres!
Assuming glucose-6-phosphate is in equilibrium with glucose and phosphate, the equilibrium concentration of glucose-6-phosphate would also be 5mM. This is based on the principle of mass action and the equilibrium constant of the reaction between glucose, phosphate, and glucose-6-phosphate.
glucose-6-phosphate