Guest guest Posted May 13, 2003 Report Share Posted May 13, 2003 In einer eMail vom 05.05.03 11:28:00 (MEZ) - Mitteleurop. Sommerzeit schreibt vgammill@...: > > > Katharina, > There can be variation among PSA test kits that are supplied by > different manufacturers, and there can be differences in technique and in > equipment calibration in the labs that perform the tests. If your father > has a low PSA count then these differences are more important and your > father should try to use the same clinic or testing facility. > http://www.hollywoodurology.com/PSA.html is a good source of information on > Dear Mr. Gammill, I want to thank you for your response, and I apologize for being a bit tardy in my answering, but it was only yesterday that I held in hand the letter from the lab. The cancer screening of my father's said: PSA (total): test result 1.21, reference <4.0 ug/l, method: ECLIA Roche diagnostics, analytic limit 0.002ug/l, functional sensitivity 0.03 ug/l CEA: test result 11.3 reference <7.5 ug/l (smoker) method ECLIA Ca 19-9 test result: 59.2 reference <37 kU/l method ECLIA interpretation of Ca19-9: " grey zone " from 37 to 100 kU/l. Slightly raised lab results are also found in benign disorder such as gall disorders, liver disorders, pancreatitis, mucoviscidosis. serum-serotonin 294 (my opinion: result by overdosing neuroMD) reference 50 to 230 ug/l method HPLC formaldehyd in urine 14 reference <30 method HPLC natrium 136 reference 135 to 150 method ISE cortisol (11.00am) 12.0 reference 6.2 to 19.4 (I am still looking for a table that shows the reference expected values by 4.00 am and 16.00 pm, as that would be more adequate to human biocircle of cortisol. It would probably also reverse the reference, as cortisol should be high at waking time and lower in the evening. Am I assuming right?) aluminium 33.0 ug/l reference <20 method AAS celiac diagnostics: Endomysium-antibodies: negativ Titer, method IFT gliadin-antibodies: IgG-AB 6.07 reference <18 mg/l IgA-AB 3.16 reference <3.0 (My father is supposed to be on glutenfree diet, if followed well, the IgA goes down to normal, whereas the IgG stays up. IgA is many a time the indicator whether the patient is compliant with the diet.) tissue-transglutaminase-AB 1.2 U/ml reference negativ <5 borderline 5 to 8 positiv >8 method ELISA reticulin antibofdies: negativ Titer, method IFT (To me it might be his diet is only sligthtly deviant, or does this look like a celiac disease at all? What would be the constellation of lab results in celiac disease? My father reported a doctor exclaiming on examining him: " Never ever in my life have I seen such a long gut!!! " which is mostly how a body compensates for malabsorption in celiac disease. Also when avoiding gluten in his nutrition he went from cachectic to four pounds more in a week and six kilogramms more in eight weeks! If it is not reaction to gliadin, what would appear as probable differential diagnoses with IgA too high? I am at a loss what to think of all this.) I would appreciate and be grateful for your answers, Katharina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 13, 2003 Report Share Posted May 13, 2003 In einer eMail vom 05.05.03 11:28:00 (MEZ) - Mitteleurop. Sommerzeit schreibt vgammill@...: > > > Katharina, > There can be variation among PSA test kits that are supplied by > different manufacturers, and there can be differences in technique and in > equipment calibration in the labs that perform the tests. If your father > has a low PSA count then these differences are more important and your > father should try to use the same clinic or testing facility. > http://www.hollywoodurology.com/PSA.html is a good source of information on > Dear Mr. Gammill, I want to thank you for your response, and I apologize for being a bit tardy in my answering, but it was only yesterday that I held in hand the letter from the lab. The cancer screening of my father's said: PSA (total): test result 1.21, reference <4.0 ug/l, method: ECLIA Roche diagnostics, analytic limit 0.002ug/l, functional sensitivity 0.03 ug/l CEA: test result 11.3 reference <7.5 ug/l (smoker) method ECLIA Ca 19-9 test result: 59.2 reference <37 kU/l method ECLIA interpretation of Ca19-9: " grey zone " from 37 to 100 kU/l. Slightly raised lab results are also found in benign disorder such as gall disorders, liver disorders, pancreatitis, mucoviscidosis. serum-serotonin 294 (my opinion: result by overdosing neuroMD) reference 50 to 230 ug/l method HPLC formaldehyd in urine 14 reference <30 method HPLC natrium 136 reference 135 to 150 method ISE cortisol (11.00am) 12.0 reference 6.2 to 19.4 (I am still looking for a table that shows the reference expected values by 4.00 am and 16.00 pm, as that would be more adequate to human biocircle of cortisol. It would probably also reverse the reference, as cortisol should be high at waking time and lower in the evening. Am I assuming right?) aluminium 33.0 ug/l reference <20 method AAS celiac diagnostics: Endomysium-antibodies: negativ Titer, method IFT gliadin-antibodies: IgG-AB 6.07 reference <18 mg/l IgA-AB 3.16 reference <3.0 (My father is supposed to be on glutenfree diet, if followed well, the IgA goes down to normal, whereas the IgG stays up. IgA is many a time the indicator whether the patient is compliant with the diet.) tissue-transglutaminase-AB 1.2 U/ml reference negativ <5 borderline 5 to 8 positiv >8 method ELISA reticulin antibofdies: negativ Titer, method IFT (To me it might be his diet is only sligthtly deviant, or does this look like a celiac disease at all? What would be the constellation of lab results in celiac disease? My father reported a doctor exclaiming on examining him: " Never ever in my life have I seen such a long gut!!! " which is mostly how a body compensates for malabsorption in celiac disease. Also when avoiding gluten in his nutrition he went from cachectic to four pounds more in a week and six kilogramms more in eight weeks! If it is not reaction to gliadin, what would appear as probable differential diagnoses with IgA too high? I am at a loss what to think of all this.) I would appreciate and be grateful for your answers, Katharina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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