Guest guest Posted January 13, 2003 Report Share Posted January 13, 2003 > If you have thyroglobulin antibodies (which you don't - since the > " normal " is less than 2, and that's where yours are), it means that > your TG levels may not be reliable, because the antibodies can > interfere with the testing for TG. When they take your TG levels, > they'll also do a test for antibodies. > > > what exactly do you mean here? Is my level of 0.9 for > thyroglobulin and <2 thyroglobulin this ok?... or is one not > accurate? Yes, the 0.9 tg is good, and the fact that the TG antibodies are in the normal limit means that the tg should be accurate. > it says in my lab work ( noted at the bottom) If the > sample containes thyroglobulin Ab of greater then 2 the antibody > could interfere in the dertimination of thyroglobulin.. But since > mine was less then 2 i didn't think i needed to understand what that > ment... Not a big deal - I was just explaining what the results of the test means :-) Cheers, Alisa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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