Normal A1C remains the same
Dear Dr. Roach: Do you find in your practice that “normal” A1C for non-diabetics changes with age? — D.D.
The hemoglobin A1C is a measure of how much sugar is on a hemoglobin molecule. Blood sugar will attach to hemoglobin, and the more sugar in the blood, the more that will become bound to hemoglobin over the lifetime of a red blood cell. The A1C is not reliable in people with abnormal or unusual hemoglobin types, or in people with a condition of increased breakdown of blood cells.
As people get older, their ability to respond to a sugar load decreases. For a person without diabetes, this relative inability to metabolize sugar has little significance, but it does make the average A1C increase somewhat with age.
Even though the average A1C increases with age, the normal A1C remains as defined, independent of age: less than 5.7%.
Dear Dr. Roach: Can a viral infection produce a heart murmur?— J.K.
Yes. A heart murmur can be normal (physiologic) or abnormal, usually due to a problem with a heart valve. In a person with a damaged heart valve, a trained listener can clearly hear abnormal, turbulent blood flow across the valve, and we can usually discern which valve is affected.
A physician can sometimes hear blood flowing through a structurally normal valve. This is more common in people who are thin, young and high cardiac output. A viral infection produces an increase in cardiac output, so it willmake a physiologic heart murmur more noticeable.
One bacterial infection, rheumatic fever, can damage the heart valves. Fortunately, rheumatic fever is veryuncommonnowin the age of antibiotics, but rheumatic heart disease is still a major cause of valvular heart disease in older patients.