The Reproducibility of Bone-Related Biochemical Variables in Postmenopausal Women

Author:

Morris Howard A,Wishart Judith M1,Horowitz Michael1,Need Allan G,Nordin B E Christopher

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, South Australia

Abstract

Seventeen measured and derived bone-related biochemical variables were determined in 60 postmenopausal women on two occasions from 1 to 35 months apart. The coefficients of determination ( r2) between the first and second observations were highly significant in respect of all measured and calculated variables except for anion gap, calculated complexed calcium, fasting urinary sodium:creatinine ratio and urinary phosphate:creatinine ratio. The variables with coefficients of determination which ranked highest include plasma alkaline phosphatase, albumin, globulins, calculated ionized calcium and fasting urinary corrected calcium:creatinine and hydroxyproline: creatinine ratios. They also showed marked individuality suggesting that changes within the conventional population based reference range possibly indicate significant physiological changes in metabolism. The critical difference for two results to be significantly different ( P < 0·05) was calculated from the total variation for each variable. We conclude that most of the measured and derived bone-related biochemical variables in fasting plasma and urine samples are sufficiently reproducible in postmenopausal women to be clinically and physiologically meaningful but that urinary sodium and phosphate are inconstant and probably dependent on the previous day's dietary intake.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry,General Medicine

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