Literature DB >> 923074

Semi-automated vs. visual reading of urinalysis dipsticks.

J D Peele, R H Gadsden, R Crews.   

Abstract

Semi-automated reflectance readings of urinalysis dipsticks showed better precision than visual readings in the case of artificially prepared urine samples containing glucose, ketone, and protein. Actual pathological specimens containing glucose, protein, and nitrite also showed that instrumental readings were better than visual. Results of repeated visual readings spread over three different color blocks for certain concentrations of glucose, ketone, and protein, whereas repeated instrumental readings were never spread greater than two color blocks. Subjectivity can be reduced by semi-automated dipstick urinalysis.

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Year:  1977        PMID: 923074

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Chem        ISSN: 0009-9147            Impact factor:   8.327


  11 in total

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3.  Analysis of Paper-Based Colorimetric Assays With a Smartphone Spectrometer.

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6.  High-throughput rapid-prototyping of low-cost paper-based microfluidics.

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8.  Evaluation of dipstick analysis among elderly residents to detect bacteriuria: a cross-sectional study in 32 nursing homes.

Authors:  Pär-Daniel Sundvall; Ronny K Gunnarsson
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9.  Prospective, observational study comparing automated and visual point-of-care urinalysis in general practice.

Authors:  Sanne van Delft; Annelijn Goedhart; Mark Spigt; Bart van Pinxteren; Niek de Wit; Rogier Hopstaken
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10.  Impact of rural versus urban setting on kidney markers: a cross-sectional study in South-Kivu, DRCongo.

Authors:  Mannix Imani Masimango; Michel P Hermans; Espoir Bwenge Malembaka; Pierre Wallemacq; Ernest Kiswaya Sumaili; Catherine Fillée; William D'Hoore; Cheryl A Winkler; Sophie Limou; Michel Jadoul
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