The concentrations of 25 plasma proteins were measured in 22 patients with membranous nephropathy. For some large proteins, the plasma concentrations were increased; there were also large proteins with low plasma concentrations, but small or medium-sized proteins showed uniformly lower plasma concentration than the controls. Plasma colloid osmotic pressure (π) and viscosity (η) were not interrelated but showed positive and significant correlations with plasma concentrations of small and medium-sized proteins (π) and plasma concentrations of large proteins (η), respectively. Nephrotic plasma is not efficient in maintaining plasma π but highly efficient in maintaining plasma η. High plasma fibrinogen concentrations and low antithrombin III concentrations may predispose to thrombosis, and low IgG concentrations may account for the higher predisposition to bacterial infection. The relative composition of nephrotic plasma is heavily dependent on the size of the different proteins. Plasma π and η are also maintained by the relative preponderance of different plasma proteins.
A considerable demand for convenient, rapid, inexpensive assays of ferritin in serum has been generated in recent years in hospital laboratories and blood banks. We describe a simple and rapid particle-enhanced turbidimetric immunoassay suitable for routine application in a Monarch 2000 centrifugal analyzer with commercially available reagents. This fully automated assay (y) requires no pretreatment of sample, and correlation with a two-step sandwich ELISA (x) is excellent (y = 1.018x + 0.397, Sy/x = 0.027). The analytical range extends from 5 to 900 micrograms/L. Intraassay imprecision (CV) ranged from 1.1% to 5% for various specimen concentrations. Interassay imprecision ranged from 2.2% for above-normal concentrations (755 micrograms/L) to 9.5% for low concentrations (39 micrograms/L). No specimen-related carryover was detected. The method has been useful in our predeposit autologous blood transfusion program for rapid assessment of iron status in patients undergoing repeated phlebotomies.
Subcutaneously administered rHuEPO at a dose of 100 IU per kg twice a week for 2 weeks is effective in facilitating the collection of blood for autologous use and may improve the cost-benefit ratio of blood conservation interventions. Doses < or = 60 IU per kg are ineffective in facilitating such collections in this surgical setting.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.