Literature DB >> 11713015

[Biological analysis of proteinuria in the laboratory: quantitative features].

T Le Bricon1.   

Abstract

Total protein analysis is one of the most frequent laboratory analyses in urine. A proteinuria above 150 mg/L is often observed in a random way in preventive or school medicine (dipsticks) or during laboratory analysis (quantitative determination). Complete (quantitative, then qualitative) and repeated evaluation of proteinuria is of major interest for the clinician to establish a diagnosis of abnormality and for therapeutic follow-up of a nephropathy, uropathy or a non-renal disease (diabetes, multiple myeloma). Most frequent (90% of cases) and severe forms of proteinuria are of glomerular type, associated to the nephrotic syndrome, hypertension, and progressive renal failure. Attention should be paid by the biologist to the pre-analytical phase (specimen collection, treatment, and storage), to clinical data, and to prescription of drugs that could interfere with protein analysis. During the last past 10 years, significant analytical advances have been made: dipstick analysis has been dropped (false positives and most importantly false negatives) as manual precipitation techniques with turbidimetric detection (poor inter-laboratory coefficients of variation, CV), replacement of Coomassie blue by pyrogallol red (improved practicability). Urinary quality control data reflect these positive changes, as demonstrated by a dramatic reduction in reported CVs. There is, however, still no reference method for total urinary protein determination and limits of existing pyrogallol red methods should be emphasized: variable reagent composition between manufacturers (such as the presence of SDS additive), limited sensitivity, difficulty in the choice of a calibration material, underestimation of free light chains, and interference with gelatin based vascular replacement fluids.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11713015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Biol Clin (Paris)        ISSN: 0003-3898            Impact factor:   0.459


  2 in total

Review 1.  The role of laboratory testing in detection and classification of chronic kidney disease: national recommendations.

Authors:  Vanja Radišić Biljak; Lorena Honović; Jasminka Matica; Branka Krešić; Sanela Šimić Vojak
Journal:  Biochem Med (Zagreb)       Date:  2017-02-15       Impact factor: 2.313

2.  [Cryoglobulin and factors associated with it in patient with anti-hepatitis-C antibodies living in resource-limited countries].

Authors:  Servais Albert Fiacre Bagnaka Eloumou; Jean Pierre Nda Mefo'o; Winnie Tatiana Bekolo Nga; Gabin Ulrich Kenfack; Linus Yakana; Agnès Malongue; Cecile Okalla; Mathurin Kowo; Firmin Ankoune Andoulo; Christian Tzeuton; Marie Solange Doualla Bidja; Henry Luma Namme; Dieudonne Adiogo; Dominique Noah Noah
Journal:  Pan Afr Med J       Date:  2019-07-04
  2 in total

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