Individual character of variation in time-series studies of healthy people. II. Differences in values for clinical chemical analyses in serum among demographic groups, by age and sex

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Abstract

Assessment of the significance of an observed set of serum chemical values for determining a person's state of health requires comparison with a set of defined reference values. The assumption was tested that a reference group of individuals, categorized by age and sex, gives a narrower range of variation than does a larger mixed population. If this were true, the demographic set would be a more sensitive reference than is the customary 'normal range' for interpretation of values occurring in the individual. The ratio, R, of intra-personal to inter-personal (group) standard deviations was similar for defined age/sex classes and the overall group for 16 serum constituents. When the 'raw' intra-individual variation (biological plus analytic variation) was adjusted to remove the average analytical component, the resulting R was less than 0.80 for all constituents except creatine kinase, which indicates that these are all particularly strong 'discriminators' of individuality. These results imply the need for individual rather than population-based reference ranges, even if the latter are from persons of similar age and the same sex.

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Williams, G. Z., Widdowson, G. M., & Penton, J. (1978). Individual character of variation in time-series studies of healthy people. II. Differences in values for clinical chemical analyses in serum among demographic groups, by age and sex. Clinical Chemistry, 24(2), 313–320. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/24.2.313

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