โš–๏ธ COMPARISON

Fasting Glucose: Men vs Women

How do metric values differ between men and women? Explore sex-based differences in health benchmarks.

Men
95 mg/dL
Median (50th percentile)
Difference
-5.3%
At median
Women
90 mg/dL
Median (50th percentile)
โš ๏ธ Content Quality Notice: This page has limited data (0/10 data points). Page is set to noindex until expanded.
  • Group A has no percentile data
  • Group B has no percentile data

๐Ÿ’ก Key Insight

Men have slightly higher fasting glucose values (5.3% higher than Women).

Percentile Comparison

PercentileMenWomenDifference
5th54 mg/dL49 mg/dL-9.3%
25th78 mg/dL73 mg/dL-6.4%
50th95 mg/dL90 mg/dL-5.3%
75th112 mg/dL107 mg/dL-4.5%
95th136 mg/dL131 mg/dL-3.7%
Mean95 mg/dL90 mg/dL-5.3%

Visual Comparison

MenWomen
5th
54
49
25th
78
73
50th
95
90
75th
112
107
95th
136
131

๐Ÿ”ฌ Blood Glucose & Diabetes Prevention

Fasting blood glucose is a key marker for diabetes risk. The American Diabetes Association estimates that 96 million U.S. adults have prediabetes, and most don't know it. Early detection through regular testing enables lifestyle interventions that can prevent or delay type 2 diabetes.

Key Research Findings

  • Lifestyle intervention can reduce diabetes risk by 58% in high-risk individuals
  • HbA1c provides a 2-3 month average, complementing fasting glucose
  • Continuous glucose monitoring reveals daily patterns that single tests miss
  • Postprandial glucose spikes may predict risk even with normal fasting values
๐Ÿ“š Research Note: The Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) demonstrated that lifestyle modification is more effective than medication for preventing diabetes.
Sources: ADA, NIH

โ“ Frequently Asked Questions

Why is fasting glucose similar between Men and Women?

Fasting glucose variations reflect differences in insulin sensitivity, metabolic rate, and body composition. Age-related increases in glucose are associated with rising diabetes risk.

Source: ADA

How should I interpret my fasting glucose compared to these benchmarks?

Find your appropriate demographic group and percentile range. Being in the 25th-75th percentile (middle 50%) is typical. Percentiles below 5th or above 95th may warrant discussion with a healthcare provider, though clinical context is essentialโ€”a single measurement rarely tells the whole story.

Source: Clinical Guidelines

How reliable is this comparison data?

This data comes from the CDC's National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), a continuously conducted survey that uses rigorous sampling methodology to represent the U.S. civilian non-institutionalized population. Sample sizes typically exceed 5,000 per demographic group, with weighted analysis accounting for the complex survey design.

Source: CDC NHANES

What This Comparison Means

Understanding differences in fasting glucose between men and women is important for:

  • Accurate benchmarking โ€“ Compare yourself to the appropriate reference population
  • Clinical interpretation โ€“ Healthcare providers use demographic-specific ranges
  • Research understanding โ€“ Biological and lifestyle factors influence these differences
  • Personalized health goals โ€“ Set realistic targets based on your demographic
โš ๏ธ Important: These are population averages. Individual variation within each group is significant. Always consult healthcare providers for personal health advice.

Explore This Metric

๐Ÿ“Š View full Fasting Glucose benchmarks with interactive percentile calculatorโ†’

๐Ÿ“ŠData Transparency & Sources