5 research outputs found

    Digital Dermatoglyphics of the Baganda of Uganda

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    Digital dermatoglyphics of 84 females and 111 males of the Baganda tribe of Uganda have been analyzed and data on the pattern type distribution, pattern intensity and pattern types indices presented. The proportion of arches on digits I-V in the Baganda is similar to the distribution in other Black African groups. The Baganda have a higher frequency of radial loops on the left hand and radial loops form 2.2% of all the digital patterns

    Development and implementation of an electronic interface for complex clinical laboratory instruments without a vendor-provided data transfer interface

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    Background: Clinical pathology laboratories increasingly use complex instruments that incorporate chromatographic separation, e.g. liquid chromatography, with mass detection for rapid identification and quantification of biochemicals, biomolecules, or pharmaceuticals. Electronic data management for these instruments through interfaces with laboratory information systems (LIS) is not generally available from the instrument manufacturers or LIS vendors. Unavailability of a data management interface is a limiting factor in the use of these instruments in clinical laboratories where there is a demand for high-throughput assays with turn-around times that meet patient care needs. Materials and Methods: Professional society guidelines for design and transfer of data between instruments and LIS were used in the development and implementation of the interface. File transfer protocols and support utilities were written to facilitate transfer of information between the instruments and the LIS. An interface was created for liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectroscopy and inductively coupled plasma-mass spectroscopy instruments to manage data in the Sunquest® LIS. Results: Interface validation, implementation and data transfer fidelity as well as training of technologists for use of the interface was performed by the LIS group. The technologists were familiarized with the data verification process as a part of the data management protocol. The total time for the technologists for patient/control sample data entry, assay results data transfer, and results verification was reduced from approximately 20 s per sample to <1 s per sample. Sample identification, results data entry errors, and omissions were eliminated. There was electronic record of the technologist performing the assay runs and data management. Conclusions: Development of a data management interface for complex, chromatography instruments in clinical laboratories has resulted in rapid, accurate, verifiable information transfers between instruments and LIS. This has eliminated manual data entry that is prone to errors and enabled technologists to focus on analytical applications on the instruments

    Serumethanol determination: comparison of lactate dehydrogenase interference in three enzymatic assays

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    Abstract Gas chromatography is considered to be the reference method for ethyl alcohol determination. However, enzymatic ethanol assays have been developed for use in the clinical laboratory by several commercial vendors. Essentially, these assays utilize the oxidation of ethyl alcohol to acetaldehyde with concurrent reduction of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) to NADH while monitoring the increase in absorbance at 340 nm. The increase in absorbance is theoretically proportional to the ethanol concentration in the sample. Previously, several authors reported that increased concentrations of lactate and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) can cause false-positive results with certain enzymatic ethyl alcohol assays. In the present investigation, we further studied the interference of lactate and LDH in three enzymatic assays. Apparent ethyl alcohol concentrations in serum spiked with lactate and LDH, as well as patient and autopsy samples, were determined by the Syva, Abbott, and Roche enzymatic assays and by gas chromatography. The effect of coenzyme depletion on the rate of reaction and the interference of hemolysis were also investigated. Based on our results we suggest that coenzyme depletion plays a major role in the severity of the false-positive ethyl alcohol result, and the interference from hemolysis has a negligible effect on these results. We also confirm the previous studies in showing that elevated serum-lactate and/DH concentrations can result in varying degrees of false-positive ethyl alcohol concentrations in the three enzymatic assays. This should be taken into consideration in the management of patients in a tertiary care medical center
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