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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Clinical & experimental allergy 26 (1996), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-2222
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Background and objective The ELItest® is a newly developed system to measure specific IgE based on allergen bound to paper rings and an alkaline phosphatase conjugated second antibody detection system. It was compared to the CAP® system, a method based on allergen conjugated to an encapsulated cellulose polymer and a β-galactosidase conjugated fluorescence detection system.Methods Sera of 300 patients with positive history and positive skin-prick tests to common allergens (birch, timothy-grass, cat dander, dermatophagoides pteronyssinus, wasp venom) and 30 negative controls were tested in both systems. Serial dilutions of high titre sera were measured; inter- and intraassay coefficients of variation (cv) were determined.Results The CAP system proved to be more sensitive (92.3%) compared to ELItest (84%) but marginally less specific (94.7% for CAP versus 96.7% for ELItest). Intraassay cv were slightly lower in the ELItest (7.2% CAP versus 6.4% ELItest), whereas the interassay cv was roughly twice as high for ELItest (20.1%) than for the CAP system (11.4%). Linearity over an 8-fold dilution was good in both tests (r2 0.979 ELItest versus 0.996 CAP), although ELItest levelled off at higher allergen concentrations. Similarly, correlation analysis between both systems revealed that ELItest consistently measured lower values, especially at higher concentrations of specific IgE. The slope of the linear regression line of a log/log plot of measured IgE concentrations was significantly lower than 1 in birch, cat and wasp; the y-intersect was significantly lower than 0 in all analysed allergens.Conclusion These results suggest that the ELItest system for the measurement of specific IgE is not quite as reproducible and sensitive as the CAP system but slightly more specific, and that higher concentrations of specific IgE are measured lower in the ELItest. One potential reason might be that the amount of allergen bound to a paper ring might be smaller than that bound to a cellulose polymer, but further experiments are necessary to prove this hypothesis.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-5233
    Keywords: Type 1 diabetes mellitus ; Tubular sodium handling ; Lithium clearance ; Renal haemodynamics
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The effects of insulin on renal haemodynamics and renal sodium handling were studied in eight insulindependent (type 1) diabetic patients (aged 30±3 years). Seven healthy men (aged 38±4 years) served as controls. The type 1 diabetic patients were resistant to insulin-stimulated glucose disposal as estimated by a 45% lower metabolic (P〈0.01) clearance of glucose as compared with controls. However, type 1 diabetic patients were still sensitive to the distal tubular antinatriuretic effect of insulin, as indicated by an increase in distal sodium reabsorption (95.5%±0.5% to 96.9%±0.4%;P〈0.05) during insulin infusion compared with controls (95.5%±0.6% to 97.4%±0.3%;P〈0.05). In control subjects insulin infusion was associated with 9% increases (P〈0.05) in lithium clearance and in renal plasma flow, whereas no significant increases in lithium clearance and in renal plasma flow were observed in the type 1 diabetic patients. In both groups, the changes in renal plasma flow in response to insulin infusion were positively correlated with that in lithium clearance (r=0.80 andr=0.90, respectively;P〈0.05−0.01). In conclusion, the present result demonstrates an intact distal tubular sodium retaining effect in conjunction with a blunted decrease in proximal tubular sodium reabsorption following insulin infusion, which could be the result of an impaired renal vasodilation in type 1 diabetes mellitus.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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