THE RELIABILITY OF THE INTERNATIONAL NORMALISED RATIO (INR) DURING SHORT TERM ORAL ANTICOAGULANT TREATMENT

1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
A McKernan ◽  
J M Thomson ◽  
L Poller

A prospective study has been performed to assess INR values obtained with a variety of thromboplastins during the early days of coumarin treatment. The reagents were BCT/253 (the primary International Reference Preparation), Diagen Activated, Diagen Freeze Dried, Manchester Reagent and Dade Thromboplastin FS. Prothrombin times were performed before the start of treatment and at regular intervals on fifteen patients who were given a slow induction regime. In theory INR should be the same irrespective of the thromboplastin. A wide range of values was however observed with the different thromboplastins on the same plasma samples. The mean deviations of the individual reagents from the mean INR obtained with the primary IRP were: Diagen Freeze-Dried 26%, Diagen Activated 13%, Dade FS 17%, Manchester Reagent 3%.There are two possible explanations for the discrepant findings. 1) In the induction phase Vitamin K dependent clotting factors are depressed at varying rates and thromboplastins differ in their sensitivity to the depression of these factors. The International Sensitivity Indices from which INR are derived are based on results from long-term stabilised patients. 2) The manufacturers' calibrations may be incorrect as demonstrated by the consistent differences of the results with some reagents from the IRP. The findings indicate therefore that INR values may not be dependable in the early days of oral anticoagulation with some thromboplastin reagents and that manufacturers' calibrations require independent assessment preferably by national control laboratories.

1992 ◽  
Vol 67 (01) ◽  
pp. 042-045 ◽  
Author(s):  
Armando Tripodi ◽  
Arnaldo Arbini ◽  
Veena Chantarangkul ◽  
Pier Mannuccio Mannucci

SummaryRelipidated recombinant tissue factor (r-TF) has been assessed in comparison with conventional rabbit brain thromboplastin (Manchester Reagent) for its suitability for measurement of prothrombin time (PT). The International Sensitivity Index (ISI) of r-TF calibrated against the International Reference Preparation BCT/253 (human plain) was found to be 0.96 and 1.12 with instrumental and manual techniques. Our study of plasmas from patients with congenital deficiencies of clotting factors covering a wide range of severity demonstrates that r-TF is able to detect even minor deficiencies of factors involved in the extrinsic and common coagulation pathways. Patients with liver diseases were correctly diagnosed with a prevalence of abnormal results comparable for both reagents. Between-assay reproducibility expressed as coefficient of variation was 2.3 % and 3.9 % at normal and abnormal PT levels.In conclusion, our evaluation shows that relipidated r-TF possesses the necessary requisites of sensitivity, diagnostic accuracy and reproducibility which make it a suitable candidate for PT determination both for monitoring oral anticoagulant therapy and diagnosing congenital and acquired clotting factor deficiencies. Moreover, being a highly defined reagent it may constitute a step forward in the standardization of PT testing.


1986 ◽  
Vol 83 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.D. Kendall ◽  
A. Warley

Mast cell granules were examined by fully quantitative X-ray microanalysis of 20 cells in freeze-dried cryosections. The mast cells were situated mainly in the connective tissue of the thymic capsule of five adult male Carworth Sprague Europe rats. In addition 30 red blood cells were analysed from the same sections. Nineteen of the mast cells had granules rich in S and K. One cell had smaller granules, and in this cell the granules contained high [Ca] and [P] instead of high [S] and [K]. In the majority of cells (13) the S:K ratio was highly correlated and less than 2.2, whereas in the remaining six cells the individual granule ratios were very variable in any one cell and much higher. The mean granule [K] (994 +/− 57 mmol kg-1 dry wt) was about four times the mean cytoplasmic level of 227 +/− 81 mmol kg-1 dry wt. The existence of this difference in concentration between the granules and the cytoplasm suggests that the K in the granules must be bound. The relationship between the [K] and [S] is discussed with regard to the possible binding of heparin and amines in the granules.


1966 ◽  
Vol 19 (3_suppl) ◽  
pp. 1195-1202 ◽  
Author(s):  
John A. Mills ◽  
Alan Nicolas-Fanourakis

An assessment was made of the strength and direction of the relationship between rated degree of familiarity for connected discourse and the extent of recall of such material. The experimental material consisted of two short passages of prose (a narrative and an argument) and of a rating scale containing all the sentences from these passages inserted randomly among other individual sentences selected from a wide range of sources. 20 Ss provided both recall scores for the passages (which were presented whole) and familiarity ratings for the sentences in the rating scale. When recall scores for the individual sentences were correlated with the mean ratings, a positive and significant value was found. The bearing of this finding on (he expectations of interference theory is discussed.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1948 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 382-404
Author(s):  
MARION M. MARESH

As part of a longitudinal study of healthy children by the staff of the Child Research Council, roentgenograms of the chest have been made at frequent intervals. Three cardiac diameters (transverse, long, and broad) and the internal diameter of the chest were measured on each of 3205 of these roentgenograms, taken of 128 subjects over a period of years. The size and shape of the heart are illustrated and discussed with emphasis on the range of variation that is seen in healthy individuals and on the inadequacy of one set of "normal standards" for evaluating the cardiac silhouette. In spite of fluctuations in the growth curves for the cardiac diameters, a general pattern of agreement was found in the increases in the cardiac diameters and the increases in body height and weight during childhood and adolescence. It would seem that periods of rapid growth such as are usually seen in adolescence are frequently coincident with fairly rapid increases in the cardiac diameters, suggesting that cardiac demands are greater during such growth spurts. The mean values for transverse diameter of the heart showed the same type of sex differentiation that is found in the mean values for height and weight in boys and girls. It seems logical to assume that changing cardiac size should be considered as part of the growth process rather than as an isolated physical and physiologic process. The relations that seem apparent between transverse diameter of the heart and height, weight, and internal diameter of the chest could not be proved statistically by calculated coefficients of correlation. However, it was possible to show differences in the mean values for cardiac transverse diameter in three groups, classified as to height-weight relationships into overweight, medium-weight, and underweight individuals. The mean values were greatest for the fat group, least for the thin group and intermediate for the group that was of medium weight for height. Body build may therefore be a factor in determining cardiac size during childhood as well as during adolescence and adult life. Since the width of the chest is increasing during childhood and adolescence in much the same manner that the transverse diameter of the heart is increasing, cardiothoracic ratios do not become progressively greater with advancing age. In fact, the successive ratios on the same individual show little regularity toward either increase or decrease although mean values for the different ages do decrease from a high of 0.44 at four years of age to a low of 0.40 in the post-adolescent age groups. Each individual showed considerable fluctuation in the cardio-thoracic ratios but no one person fluctuated as much as the range for the whole group. No ratios were found above 0.50 or below 0.32. No sex differences were found nor was there any significant difference in the cardio-thoracic ratios for the groups of different height-weight proportions. In evaluating the heart size of an individual from a single film, the cardio-thoracic ratio is probably as satisfactory as any other measurement if one recognizes the wide range of healthy variation. An increase in the cardio-thoracic ratio on successive roentgenograms might be more significant clinically than cardiac measurements which did not take into consideration the growth of the individual. The nomogram constructed by Ungerleider based on height and weight for prediction of transverse diameter of the heart on teleoroentgenograms of adults was tested for its applicability to the later childhood, adolescent and early adult periods. Nearly half the predicted cardiac transverse diameters exceeded the measured values by 10% or more. This study would seem to indicate, therefore, that one should not be discouraged by the range of variation or the fluctuations in cardiac measurements from routine roentgenograms of the chest. Valuable information regarding the significance of the size of the heart can be obtained from such roentgenograms if one relates those data to the basic process of growth and maturation of the individual.


1970 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 99-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. R. Gallagher

SUMMARYEstimates of the incidence of coarse fibres and medullation were made from 1014 bales of Merino greasy wool, from the five major wool-selling centres in Australia. A full range of wool types was represented from the fault-free spinners types to the burry, dusty, inferior topmakers' types. The wool consisted of 36 processors' lots ranging from 1 to 120 bales.The mean diameter of the 36 lots was 20·7 ± 5·3 μ 2·4% of the fibre population exceeded 30 μ the incidence of medullation was 1·1%.Mean diameters of the individual lots ranged from 14·7 to 25·3 μ Twenty-one of the 36 lots had coefficients of variation of mean fibre diameter which exceeded 23%. The range of clean, oven-dried yield was 49·4–69·1%. The between-lot variation in fibre medullation was 0–3·1%.It is concluded that fibre coarseness as measured by diameter was not a problem in the wide range of wool sampled. However, the incidence of medullation is an increase on previous estimates and should be a cause of concern to breeders.


Author(s):  
Bishnu Prasad Sharma

   Foreign employment is one of the most significant phenomena impacting a wide range of dimensions in South Asian economies that characterize a large population out-migrating for work. whether sending a member for foreign employment a preferred informed choice of households in such economies, is not known. This paper aims to examine this research question using a binary logit model using indicators of household informed decision making, leadership qualities and the access to social networks. The findings indicated that foreign employment is not a preferred choice of households but is primarily the decision of the individual to go for foreign employment rather remain unemployed and economically insecure at home. Further analysis revealed that outstanding loans were higher, and the loans paid last year were also higher for foreign employment households compared to non-foreign employed households. The mean per capita consumption of households with foreign employed member were not statistically different than those of non-foreign employed households indicating no significant welfare gain for a majority of foreign employed labour households.


1984 ◽  
Vol 30 (8) ◽  
pp. 1392-1395 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Tripodi ◽  
P M Mannucci

Abstract The clinical usefulness of a chromogenic method for prothrombin time (PT) determination has been assessed in a wide range of clinical conditions, and it is compared with the conventional clotting method for PT. The new method appears to be as sensitive as the clotting PT to deficiencies of clotting factors of the extrinsic and common pathway, except for fibrinogen. Patients with proven liver disease were correctly diagnosed with a prevalence of abnormal results comparable to that by the clotting PT. Results by the two methods correlated highly (r = 0.96) for normal and congenitally deficient plasmas as well as for plasmas from patients on oral anticoagulant treatment (r = 0.95). High reproducibility (between-assay CV less than 3%) and easy adaptation to centrifugal analyzers make it a suitable candidate to replace the conventional method.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 4098-4098
Author(s):  
Helga Vetr ◽  
Sabine Geiter ◽  
Fritz Scheiflinger ◽  
Michael Dockal ◽  
Bernd R. Binder

Abstract Defects in activity and/or antigen levels of ADAMTS-13, the von Willebrand Factor (vWF) cleaving protease, are viewed as the main cause inducing the microvascular thrombotic disorder TTP (thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura) that is in more than 90% of cases fatal if not treated early and appropriately. Malfunction of ADAMTS-13 with respect to cleave multimeric vWF can be caused by auto-antibodies directed against ADAMTS-13, by decreased presence of ADAMTS-13 in the circulation or by defective activity of ADAMTS-13. Therefore rapid and reliable diagnosis of ADAMTS-13 parameters is a clinical need. We present here an assay for quantification of ADAMTS-13 antigen levels. The assay is a regular double sandwich ELISA employing a monoclonal antibody for capturing ADAMTS-13 from the sample by binding to the CUB domains. The bound ADAMTS-13 is detected by a polyclonal antibody conjugate. The sensitivity of the assay is below 10% of the normal antigen level. In normal samples a wide range (50% to 200%) of the mean level was observed. In idiopathic TTP plasmas also a wide range of antigen levels was observed but with a slighltly lower mean value than in normal samples. Samples from hereditary TTP mostly showed lower antigen levels than normal samples. Thus we could show that this assay provides a useful tool for measuring ADAMTS-13 antigen levels. In combination with our activity assay, which is being developed in parallel, it will be possible to establish ratios of activity and antigen which could provide more insight into the mechanisms of ADAMTS-13 deficiencies than the individual values for antigen and activity.


1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
F Dati ◽  
U Becker ◽  
N Heimburger

The determination of prothrombin time (PT) in oral anticoagulant control is affected by a broad variation. The responsible factors are: type of thromboplastin incorporated in the PT reagents, procedure for use, clotting factors or heparin inhibitors added to the reagent, method of expression of PT results. Recently, joint recommendations have been issued by International Committees (ICSH/ICTH) taking into account the system of International Thromboplastins and the statistical model for thromboplastin calibration established by WHO. The aim is a standardization of commercial thromboplastins for PT tests in order to allow the use of the international scale of oral anticoagulant intensity (INR: Intern. Normalized Ratio). Following such recommendations we have standardized two new PT tests, based on coagulometric and photometric methods which rely on the same sensitive human placental thromboplastin. The coagulometric PT test (Thromborel®S) is performed with conventional coagulometers. The photometric PT assay (Chromoquick®) uses a new chromogenic substrate specific for thrombin. This method is based on the measurement of the time necessary to reach a fixed increase of absorbance (0.1 A) using a special microprocessor-controlled photometer.The two PT reagents were calibrated either directly against a reference preparation (BCT) or via an intermediate standard thromboplastin in two multicentric studies. The calibration procedure by the WHO method allows to assign the corresponding ISI (Intern. Sensitivity Index) to the PT reagent used and the transformation of the obtained prothrombin ratio (PR) into INR by the equation INR = PRISI. The calculated ISI values were 1.08 for the coagulometric PT reagent (n = 330) and 1.07 for the photometric reagent (n = 365), respectively.The reproducibility of the ISI value for the new human placental thromboplastin for 64 different batches amounts to 3.6 %, the mean ISI value being 1.12.Comparison with the reference thromboplastins in PR values gave a good correlation.A) Coagul. PT assay (x): r = 0.964; y = 1.03x ™ 0.1;B) Photom. PT assay (x): r = 0.940; y = 1.02x ™ 0.1.


Animals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 1873
Author(s):  
Joan Maria Rosell ◽  
Luis Fernando de la Fuente ◽  
María Teresa Carbajo ◽  
Xosé María Fernández

In this study, we determined the occurrence of reproductive diseases in does on 1373 visited farms in Spain and Portugal, between 1994 and 2019. The retrospective information obtained was entered in a database classified as follows: apparent infertility (≤70% pregnancy rate), abortions (≥2% of serviced does), high fetal death risk at parturition (≥10%) or dystocia, amongst others. Infertility was the reason for 181 visits. The median of prevalence of apparent infertility in these cases was 35% (minimum to maximum: 25–90%) and the mean, 37.4%. We performed a prospective study to determine risk factors at the individual and farm level, with a second database corresponding to 2014–2019. We carried out pregnancy checks, assessed sanitary status and body condition, and recorded the age of 17,297 rebred lactating does on 142 farms. The median size of the farms was 800 does, and the examined cohorts, 350 does. Predisposing risk factors for infertility were observed: e.g., mastitis had an effect. During the 5-year study, we made a third database with the results from 190,508 does palpated by producers in a subset of 134 farms. In this case, the median of the prevalence of apparent infertility was 14.5% (minimum to maximum: 4.1–50%), which could be considered baseline occurrence when monitoring the theriogenology of rabbit doe farms. Reproductive rhythm was an enabling risk factor: does serviced ≤25 d postpartum were less fertile than at ≥32 d. We made a database with the body condition score (BCS) on a linear scale from 1 (emaciated) to 9 (obese). The pregnancy rate (PR) of underweight and borderline does (4/9) was 73.1%. The PR of overweight and borderline does (6/9) was 82.6% and those classified with a mean BCS (5/9): PR = 79.3%. We may infer that the optimum BCS for reproduction is 6/9, rather than 5/9. Some changes in female rabbit health and husbandry to improve reproductive performance and welfare are highlighted.


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