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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 30, 896-898, Copyright © 1984 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry
MG Scott, JW Hoffmann, VN Meltzer, BA Siegfried and KM Chan
We evaluated the effect of azotemia on results for glycated hemoglobin as measured by a boronate-agarose affinity method and an ion-exchange chromatographic procedure with saline preincubation and found a good correlation. However, values for glycated hemoglobin in samples from nondiabetic patients with various degrees of azotemia were consistently higher with the ion-exchange column procedure (mean, 8.5%) than with the boronate affinity method (mean, 6.2%). The latter method may thus be preferred for monitoring glycated hemoglobin in diabetic patients with impaired renal function.
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D. Chen, D. L. Crimmins, F. F. Hsu, F. P. Lindberg, and M. G. Scott Hemoglobin Raleigh as the cause of a falsely increased hemoglobin A1C in an automated ion-exchange HPLC method Clin. Chem., June 1, 1998; 44(6): 1296 - 1301. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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