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Hansol Gold Lancing Devices

  • Origin: South Korea
  • Supply Type: in stock

Supplier Info.

  • Employees Total 11-50
  • Annual Revenue US$5 Million - US$10 Million

We supply 100% Made in Korea lancing device.

The price is variable. Please let us know your quantity, type, and destination. We will estimate and give you a quotation.

We supply both wholesale and retail.

We are giving a 50% discount to our clients who are dealing first time with us.

Thank you for your continuous trust in our business.

It brings us great joy to serve you.

I hope we can continue to earn your business and if you have any comments or concerns, please let us know so we can help you better.

Let me give here a brief description about lancing device: how it works and its using method

Poking your finger to check glucose levels is an integral part of daily diabetes management. Even people using continuous glucose monitors (CGMs) need to check and calibrate to a fresh drop of blood from time to time.

But checking your blood this way is often painful and unpleasant. In the quest to help you reduce this discomfort, we are offering a lancing device from a Korean manufacturer.

How lancing devices work

Generally, lancing devices for diabetes all look very much the same. The devices are small tubes that launch a small needle known as a lancet into the skin to make a puncture that produces a drop of blood.

Lancets come out of the package with a cover over the needle tip, which you need to remove before use. Once you insert the lancet into the lancing device, there is a safety cover that keeps the needle sterile and helps avoid accidental jabs.

Lancet needles come in a variety of widths, which are measured in gauges. The finer and narrower the needle, the less painful it is to use. Oddly, higher gauge indicate finer and narrower needles, while lower gauge indicate heavier, thicker needles.

Nearly all lancing devices tend to use the same type of spring-loaded mechanism to push the lancet needle into the skin.

Most lancing devices have an adjustable setting to determine the depth of the jab. The depth is measured by the of millimeters the needle penetrates the skin. While the depth settings do not strictly correspond with the actual depth in millimeters, they are set up so that the lower-d depth setting is shallower, while higher mean a deeper jab.

Using lancing devices

It is best to use a new, sterile lancet with each jab. In real life, this does not always happen. It can be burdensome to have to change your lancet over and over, and most people find that reusing one for some time works fine.

But be aware that reusing lancets does raise the risk of infection because, once used, the lancet needle is no longer sterile. And each time a lancet is used, the needle gets more dull, increasing the jaggedness of each puncture.

In the short term, dull lancet needles can be more painful to use. Over time, they can cause more damage to the skin.

Avoiding the pain of the jab

All the manufacturers featured say their devices can reduce pain. These claims are based on some combination of the following product characteristics:

  • minimizing how much the lancing device vibrates or the lancet moves side to side when launched so that the lancet travels on a straight path

  • using a thinner (finer gauge) lancet needle

  • coating the lancet needle with a material that reduces friction with the skin being able to adjust the depth of the jab
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