Objective: The purpose of this study is to describe the evaluation and management of a surfer who presented with concussion-like symptoms and was eventually diagnosed with an unstable cervical spine fracture.
Clinical Features: A young man presented to a chiropractic clinic 5 weeks after a surfing injury. He had mild lower cervical spine pain and complaints of cognitive disturbance.
J Manipulative Physiol Ther
December 1986
Participants in the last College of American Pathologists Enzyme Surveys in 1978 were asked that they provide results for lactate dehydrogenase (LD), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), and creatine kinase (CK), for the six interrelated Enzyme Survey serum specimens, and were also asked to provide results for the same enzymes from six healthy persons and from 50 patients. Extensive data analysis revealed that porcine LD and CK in the Survey serum had kinetic properties similar to the native enzymes in fresh human serum. On this basis, we were able to merge the normal data from laboratories using diverse methods and to establish a "universal" reference range for these two enzymes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSets of survey specimens having known linear interralationships were analyzed on four occasions by approximately 450 laboratories for the five enzymes lactate dehydrogenase, aspartate aminotransferase, creatine kinase, alanine aminotransferase, and alkaline phosphatase. The results are summarized in terms of the apparent precision and relative accuracy of various analytical systems, and some apparent problems in enzyme assays are identified. The results show that interlaboratory differences in enzyme analyses are not due primarily to differences in the way laboratorians utilize their analytical systems but rather are due to fundamental differences in the instruments and reagents supplied to the laboratorians.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigated the analytical acceptability of ethylene glycol-based control sera by preparing sets of aqueous and ethylene glycol-based specimens that had added uric acid, calcium, creatinine, glucose, urea, sodium, and potassium. Ethylene glycol caused a significant systematic proportional bias in procedures involving dialysis, but had no discernible effect on methods not involving dialysis. The extent of bias was proportional to the concentration of ethylene glycol, was independent of protein concentration, and differed according to the type of dialysis system used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Clin Pathol
September 1978
Specimens used in the College of American Pathologists Survey Programs are sometimes manufactured in excess of Survey needs, and these excess specimens are made available to Survey participants after a survey is completed. These survey-validated reference materials (SVRM's) are a valuable resource to the clinical laboratory field. SVRM's are continually renewed, have a range of analyte concentrations, have reliable target values assigned for more than 20 analytes, and for all methods that are in common use.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA pilot study was conducted to identify some of the benefits and limitations of making interlaboratory comparisons of clinical assays. Sixteen laboratories that participated in a regional quality control program and used similar instrumentation each provided analyses of specimens from three male and three female healthy subjects, 25 male and 25 female clinical subjects, and several control specimens. Analysis of the data revealed that the derived normal ranges agreed well with those provided by the instrument manufacturer, and that for some analytes the laboratories produced comparable clinical assays.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Clin Pathol
September 1978
A set of linearly related serum survey specimens was analyzed by more than 200 laboratories on four occasions in 1977 for the five enzymes lactate dehydrogenase, aspartate and alanine aminotransferases, creatine phosphokinase, and alkaline phosphatase. The survey technic, which employs specimens that are designed to have multiple informational redundancies for detecting discrepancies in the survey data, was found to be a feasible approach, as a variety of methodologic biases and analytic problems were readily detected. The specimens were shown to be stable,and the mean results obtained by a reference group of laboratories were quite reproducible.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHistograms of the results of quantitative clinical laboratory analyses are usually broadly skewed because some of the patients have normal values with respect to the analyte being measured while values for others are below or above normal. We describe a technique for calculating the maximum possible number of individuals in a patient population who will give normal values and, by difference, the minimum possible number of those who will give below-normal and above-normal values. The technique permits estimation of the probability that any given result represents a member of a particular subpopulation, as well as selection of decision limits for patient classification, and estimates the degree of change required for a subject with a normal value to start giving below- or above-normal values.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSets of specimens having quantitative linear inter-relationships for 25 analytes were prepared and used in a small survey of results with multi-channel analyzers. Instrument calibration was evaluated by linear regression analysis of the analytical results, with calculation of the x- and y-intercepts and slopes. The average intercepts and slopes agreed quite well with those expected on the basis of specimen preparation, but the results from individual laboratories and from particular kinds of instruments demonstrated a variety of analytical biases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpecimens having linear relationships between concentration and instrument response for seven analytes were prepared for use with a small multi-channel analyzer. The specimens had inter-specimen and inter-constituent relationships that facilitated the performance evaluation of all channels simultaneously with each individual specimen. Techniques are described for use of the specimens in various aspects of quality control.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA set of six interrelated specimens was analyzed for creatinine, urea, and five enzyme constituents by about 10 laboratories on two occasions. The results from each laboratory were subjected to linear regression analysis and the correlation coefficients, X and Y intercepts, and slopes were calculated. These parameters then were used in various ways to (a) evaluate the composition, linearity and stability of the specimens, (b) assess the analytic precision of each laboratory, (c) assess the accuracy of the laboratories relative to their peer group, and (d) identify systematic differences among peer groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLyophilized serum specimens were manufactured in such a way that fixed quantitative interspecimen relationships were established. The specimens were analyzed for about twenty constituents by several thousand laboratories in 1971, 1972, and 1973. Most of the consensus mean values derived from these analyses were found to relect accurately the relationships established in the manufacture of the specimens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnzyme survey specimens were prepared by spiking portions of a normal serum pool with creatinine, urea, and five enzymes (lactate dehydrogenase, creatine phosphokinase, alkaline phosphatase, and aspartate and alanine aminotransferases), and preparing admixtures of the spiked pools with the original serum. This admixture technic established linear interspecimen relationships that could be confirmed by analyses for creatinine and urea nitrogen. Both ethylene glycol-stabilized liquid serum specimens and lyophilized specimens were prepared as sets of six to eight samples having six concentrations of each enzyme.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQuality-control specimens having quantitave interspecimen relationships were prepared by (a) making admixtures of two serum pools and (b) making various dilutions of the admixtures. The specimens were analyzed for many constituents to illustrate how the data obtained could be manipulated and used. The inter-related specimens permit the reduction of quality-control data to a few target values and should be particularly useful for the evaluation of multi-channel analyzers, and for use in inter-laboratory proficiency surveys.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Endocrinol Metab
February 1973
Am J Obstet Gynecol
September 1972