More than 30 years after their introduction, growth hormone (GH) immunoassays showed the poorest inter-laboratory agreement of the various hormone assays evaluated in 1998 by the UK National External Quality Assessment Scheme, in which different laboratories using different assays reported that analyses of identical samples differed two- to threefold in value. There is therefore an urgent requirement and desire within the scientific community, particularly within centres diagnosing and treating GH deficiency and acromegaly, to resolve this problem and to develop a GH assay(s) that measures solely all of the relevant components of circulating GH immunoreactivity. The main confounders in the estimation of GH levels (now that the use of GH standards other than that recommended by the World Health Organization has largely been eliminated) are GH heterogeneity, anti-GH antiserum binding site specificity and interference from circulating high-affinity GH-binding protein (GHBP). The effects of these factors are closely related. The present study investigates these factors, focussing on the influence of GHBP and antibody binding site specificity on various assays for GH. The findings lead the authors to suggest that a solution to the problem may be to develop a GH assay that measures specifically and solely all serum 22 kDa GH, as this is the major circulating fraction and carries the dominant GH bioactivity.
The objective of this study was to describe the symptoms, diagnostic measures and outcomes of extrapulmonary tuberculosis (ex-TB) in a Danish university clinic from 1990 to 1999. 48 patients with ex-TB were identified retrospectively and clinical and laboratory data extracted from the patient files. The majority were immigrants from Africa (71%). A direct connection between symptoms on admission and anatomical localization of TB was found in 83%. The main localizations of ex-TB were peripheral lymph nodes (n = 15) and the abdomen (n = 19). In 73% Mycobacterium tuberculosis could be cultured. One culture was resistant to isoniazide and 1 had decreased sensitivity to isoniazide and etambutol. Two patients relapsed with TB. Some pitfalls in diagnosing TB were found, as 13% had a normal erythrocyte sedimentation rate at presentation, 9% had a negative tuberculin skin test and fever was absent in 31% of the cases. The patients' subjective complaints on admission should guide the diagnostic procedures.
Systemic capillary leak syndrome (SCLS), also known as Clarkson syndrome, is a rare disease with potential fatal outcome. The clinical picture involves leakage of fluid and protein from the bloodstream into peripheral tissues, resulting in hypoalbuminaemia, elevated haematocrit, oedema and hypotension. The spectrum of the symptoms ranges from discrete swelling/oedema of extremities to fulminant cardiogenic shock. We present a case with a 52-year-old man diagnosed with SCLS after being resuscitated from cardiac arrest, which was complicated by compartment syndrome. The severe episode of capillary leak was potentially triggered by influenza virus infection. With the benefit of hindsight, he presented with symptoms of SCLS 2 years prior the major acute episode. Here we describe this case and review some aspects of the literature on SCLS, with particular focus on the pathogenesis, treatment/prophylaxis and long-term physical and psychological complications.
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