Biological variation in analyte concentrations in urine of apparently healthy men and women.

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Abstract

Analytical, intra-individual, and interindividual components of variation for sodium, potassium, urea, creatinine, calcium, and phosphate were estimated from results for 24-h urine specimens collected from 15 apparently healthy individuals every four weeks for 40 weeks. Expressed as output, mean values differed for men and women, except for calcium. Our data on intra-individual variation were similar to those obtained for 10 men by Shephard et al. (Clin Chem 1981;27:569-73). Calculated analytical goals are easily attained by current methods. Reference values for urine creatinine are useful only when expressed as output and stratified according to gender. The ratios of intra- to interindividual variation generally increase on such stratification; separate reference values for men and women are therefore required for analytes expressed as output. Measurements of sodium and potassium in urine should be reported as concentration, but output terms are favored for the other analytes. Differences for two serial results from an individual must be rather large to differ statistically.

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Gowans, E. M., & Fraser, C. G. (1987). Biological variation in analyte concentrations in urine of apparently healthy men and women. Clinical Chemistry, 33(6), 847–850. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/33.6.847

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