16 research outputs found
Mean platelet volume and vitamin D level
Cure, Medine Cumhur/0000-0001-9253-6459; cure, erkan/0000-0001-7807-135XWOS: 000332681100003PubMed: 24624344Background: Vitamin D deficiency and a high mean platelet volume (MPV) are related to cardiovascular disease. We investigated whether vitamin D deficiency is associated with high MPV. Methods: This study included 434 patients without chronic disease who were not taking vitamin D or calcium supplements. Vitamin D was measured by chemiluminescent microparticle immunoassay on the Architect-I2000 system (Abbott Diagnostics, USA), and MIN was measured on the Cell-Dyn Ruby analyzer (Abbott Diagnostics). Patients were divided into Groups 1 (138 [men/women, 46/92]), 2 (148 [men/women, 54/94]), and 3 (148 [men/women, 50/98]) according to vitamin D levels of 20 ng/mL, respectively. Results: the vitamin D level in Group 1 (7.7 +/- 1.9 ng/mL) was lower than that in Group 2 (15.1 +/- 1.6 ng/mL, P<0.001) and Group 3 (25.6 +/- 6.3 ng/mL, P<0.001). the MPV in Group 3 (7.5 +/- 1.0 fL) was lower than that in Group 1 (8.1 +/- 1.1 fL, P<0.001) and Group 2 (7.9 +/- 1.0 fL, P=0.009). Linear regression analysis showed that low levels of vitamin D (beta = -0.109, P = 0.019) was independently associated with increased MPV. Conclusions: There was a strong association between a low vitamin D level and a high MPV; therefore, vitamin D deficiency may be associated with increased MPV
Matrix Selection for Measurement of Zinc Levels
INTRODUCTION: Measurement of blood zinc levels is frequently used in the diagnosis of a few conditions such as growth retardation, immunodeficiency, infertility, neurological disorder, and acrodermatitis enteropathica. The serum matrix is the most preferred one to determine zinc levels due to the ease of analysis with other tests and cost-effectiveness of blood collection tubes used to obtain serum samples. In our study, we aimed to compare serum and plasma zinc test results for accurate and reliable zinc measurement in plain tubes with clot activator and gel and in heparin-free tubes, which specifically produced for trace element analysis. METHODS: Twenty-seven randomly selected patients were included in the study. Blood samples drawn simultaneously from patients were pipetted into tubes with clot activator and gel (SST) (SST II Advance, Vacutainer, Becton Dickinson and Company, USA) as well as into trace element tubes with sodium heparin (NH) (NH Trace Elements Sodium Heparin, Vacuette, Greiner Bio-One GmbH, Austria). After the centrifugation process, zinc levels in serum and plasma samples were analyzed by colorimetric method using an autoanalyzer. Bias between serum and plasma zinc levels was evaluated according to the allowable bias criterion based on biological variation and regression analysis performed. RESULTS: The mean and standard deviation of serum and plasma zinc levels were 49.0+-11.5 μg/dL and 46.4+-12.0 μg/dL, respectively, and a statistically significant difference was determined (p=0.012) in between. Besides, the bias between serum and plasma was 6.8%, which was above the allowable bias (3.3%) and considered as clinically significant. No systematic or random errors detected. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: When selecting a blood collection tube for trace element analysis, the structural differences between tubes and the matrix effect should be considered carefully
Measuring the performance of an artificial intelligence-based robot that classifies blood tubes and performs quality control in terms of preanalytical errors: A preliminary study
Objectives: Artificial intelligence-based robotic systems are increasingly used in medical laboratories. This study aimed to test the performance of KANKA (Labenko), a stand-alone, artificial intelligence-based robot that performs sorting and preanalytical quality control of blood tubes. Methods: KANKA is designed to perform preanalytical quality control with respect to error control and preanalytical sorting of blood tubes. To detect sorting errors and preanalytical inappropriateness within the routine work of the laboratory, a total of 1000 blood tubes were presented to the KANKA robot in 7 scenarios. These scenarios encompassed various days and runs, with 5 repetitions each, resulting in a total of 5000 instances of sorting and detection of preanalytical errors. As the gold standard, 2 experts working in the same laboratory identified and recorded the correct sorting and preanalytical errors. The success rate of KANKA was calculated for both the accurate tubes and those tubes with inappropriate identification. Results: KANKA achieved an overall accuracy rate of 99.98% and 100% in detecting tubes with preanalytical errors. It was found that KANKA can perform the control and sorting of 311 blood tubes per hour in terms of preanalytical errors. Conclusions: KANKA categorizes and records problem-free tubes according to laboratory subunits while identifying and classifying tubes with preanalytical inappropriateness into the correct error sections. As a blood acceptance and tube sorting system, KANKA has the potential to save labor and enhance the quality of the preanalytical process
Comparison of SYNTAX score II efficacy with SYNTAX score and TIMI risk score for predicting in-hospital and long-term mortality in patients with ST segment elevation myocardial infarction
WOS: 000439342900001PubMed ID: 29541904SYNTAX score II (SS-II) has a powerful prognostic accuracy in patients with stable complex coronary artery disease who have undergone revascularization; however, there is limited data regarding the prognosis of patients with ST segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). The aim of this study is to examine both the predictive performance of SS-II in determining in-hospital and long term mortality of STEMI patients and to compare SYNTAX score (SS) and TIMI risk score (TRS). Consecutive 1912 STEMI patients treated with primary percutaneous coronary intervention (p-PCI) retrospectively reviewed, and the remaining 1708 patients constituted the study population after exclusion. The patients were divided into three groups according to increased SS-II value: low (n:562; SS-II = 34.4). In-hospital and long term mortality rate from all causes (0 vs. 0.5 vs. 10.6% and 1.8 vs. 3.2 vs. 18.1% respectively, p <= 0.001) were significantly increased with SS-II tertiles and SS-II was found to be independent predictor of in-hospital and long term mortality (HR: 1.076 95% CI 1.060-1.092, p <0.001) and (HR: 1.070 95% CI 1.050-1.090, p <0.0001). The predictive power of SS-II, SS, and TRS were compared by ROC curve and decision curve analysis. SS-II surpassed SS and TRS in long-term and in-hospital mortality prediction. SS-II is a powerful tool to predict in-hospital and long-term mortality from all causes in STEMI patients treated with p-PCI
Düzenli ve Yoğun Egzersiz Yaptırılan Ratlarda Takviye Olarak Tüketilen Dallı Zincirli Amino Asitlerin Miyokard ve Koroner Damarlar Üzerine Etkisi
This study was conducted to investigate the effects of branched chain amino acids (BCAAs) consumption on myocardium and coronary arteries, in rats subjected to regular and intense exercise. Eight-week old, 30 male rats were randomly divided into experimental-and control-groups. For a total of 8 weeks, every other day, both groups were subjected to a ladder-climbing exercise on a 1.5 m long ladder, with 2.5 cm steps interval, at 70 degrees angle. The experimental group, besides the standard diet, was additionally fed BCAA-supplement at a dose of 1.5 mg/g/day. This study showed that, the experimental group had more frequent atherosclerotic lesions compared to the control group (61.5% vs. 21.4%; p=0.034). Although creatine kinase was similar between the groups, creatine kinase - myocardial band isoform (CK-MB) was significantly higher in the experimental group compared both to control and baseline levels. This is the first study that examines the effects of consuming BCAA supplements on myocardium and coronary arteries in rats subjected to prolonged exercise. We demonstrated that continuous and long-term consumption of BCAA supplement in endurance exercises was associated with coronary atherosclerotic process and myocardial injury
Impact of Supplementation with Branched Chain Amino Acids on Myocardium and Coronary in Regularly and Intensively Exercising Rats
This study was conducted to investigate the effects of branched chain amino acids (BCAAs) consumption on myocardium and coronary arteries, in rats subjected to regular and intense exercise. Eight-week old, 30 male rats were randomly divided into experimental-and control-groups. For a total of 8 weeks, every other day, both groups were subjected to a ladder-climbing exercise on a 1.5 m long ladder, with 2.5 cm steps interval, at 70 degrees angle. The experimental group, besides the standard diet, was additionally fed BCAA-supplement at a dose of 1.5 mg/g/day. This study showed that, the experimental group had more frequent atherosclerotic lesions compared to the control group (61.5% vs. 21.4%; p=0.034). Although creatine kinase was similar between the groups, creatine kinase - myocardial band isoform (CK-MB) was significantly higher in the experimental group compared both to control and baseline levels. This is the first study that examines the effects of consuming BCAA supplements on myocardium and coronary arteries in rats subjected to prolonged exercise. We demonstrated that continuous and long-term consumption of BCAA supplement in endurance exercises was associated with coronary atherosclerotic process and myocardial injury
Are Thyroid Functions Affected in Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children?
Objective: Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C), associated with Coronavirus disease-2019, is defined as the presence of documented fever, inflammation, and at least two signs of multisystem involvement and lack of an alternative microbial diagnosis in children who have recent or current Severe acute respiratory syndrome-Coronavirus-2 infection or exposure. In this study, we evaluated thyroid function tests in pediatric cases with MIS-C in order to understand how the hypothalamus-pituitary-thyroid axis was affected and to examine the relationship between disease severity and thyroid function. Methods: This case-control study was conducted between January 2021 and September 2021. The patient group consisted of 36 MIS-C cases, the control group included 72 healthy children. Demographic features, clinical findings, inflammatory markers, thyroid function tests, and thyroid antibody levels in cases of MIS-C were recorded. Thyroid function tests were recorded in the healthy control group. Results: When MIS-C and healthy control groups were compared, free triiodothyronine (fT3) level was lower in MIS-C cases, while free thyroxine (fT4) level was found to be lower in the healthy group (p<0.001, p=0.001, respectively). Although the fT4 level was significantly lower in controls, no significant difference was found compared with the age-appropriate reference intervals (p=0.318). When MIS-C cases were stratified by intensive care requirement, fT3 levels were also lower in those admitted to intensive care and also in those who received steroid treatment (p=0.043, p<0.001, respectively). Conclusion: Since the endocrine system critically coordinates and regulates important metabolic and biochemical pathways, investigation of endocrine function in MIS-C may be beneficial. These results show an association between low fT3 levels and both diagnosis of MIS-C and requirement for intensive care. Further studies are needed to predict the prognosis and develop a long-term follow-up management plan