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  Vol. 264 No. 9, September 5, 1990 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Portable Cholesterol Analyzers

Gregory A. Tetrault, MD
University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha

JAMA. 1990;264(9):1101-1102.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

To the Editor.—

Naughton et al1 concluded that portable cholesterol analyzers at three of four sites had insufficient accuracy, resulting in a high percentage of misclassified patients (mostly false negatives). However, the study has a number of flaws and omissions that may invalidate their results. A significant problem is the effect of posture on blood cholesterol measurements. Blood cholesterol concentrations fall significantly when an ambulatory patient sits or lies supine.2,3 The National Cholesterol Education Program Expert Panel recommends that patients be seated for at least 5 minutes before blood is drawn.4 The authors do not describe any attempt at minimizing the effects of postural changes. In their study, venous samples were obtained after finger-stick samples. If the patients were seated prior to their finger-stick cholesterol determination and were ambulatory prior to venipuncture, then the venipuncture cholesterol levels would be higher than those obtained by finger stick because . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]



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