The other issue that concerns me a little is that older physicians have been trained to look for unexplained high creatinines as a marker of ketoacidosis due to the interference in the Jaffe method. Using an enzymatic method will stop this flag.
You can't win either way
Greg Watts MSc MA
Deputy Director,
Sydney Adventist Hospital Pathology
CAUTION: This message may contain both confidential and privileged information intended for the addressee named above.
If you are not the intended recipient you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or reproduction of this message
is prohibited. If you have received this message in error please notify the sender immediately, then destroy the original message.
Any views expressed in this message are solely those of the individual sender, except where the sender is specifically authorised
by Adventist HealthCare Limited to state that they are the views of Adventist HealthCare Limited.
_____________________________________________________________________
This e-mail has been scanned for viruses by Symantec Hosted Services
Scanning Services - powered by MessageLabs. For further information
visit http://www.messagelabs.com
------ACB discussion List Information--------
This is an open discussion list for the academic and clinical community working in clinical biochemistry.
Please note, archived messages are public and can be viewed via the internet. Views expressed are those of the individual and they are responsible for all message content.
ACB Web Site
http://www.acb.org.uk
Green Laboratories Work
http://www.laboratorymedicine.nhs.uk
List Archives
http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/ACB-CLIN-CHEM-GEN.html
List Instructions (How to leave etc.)
http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/
|