Abstract Ordering laboratory tests by means of test panels is a convenient way of requesting tests, preventing necessary tests from being forgotten. However, it also leads to redundant test ordering, as not all tests in a given panel are required for each patient. As test panels proposed by doctors may contain redundant, overlapping or infrequently used tests, the active involvement of knowledgeable laboratory staff in the organisation of test panels is advisable to promote efficient test use. Laboratory staff initiated an intervention in the organisation of test panels at our hospital in 2009. After a review of the existing panels and the proposals for new panels, we established a total of 60 panels (down from 171 previously). We also stipulated that the laboratory is to be involved with all proposals for new test panels in the future. The reorganisation reduced the number of tests in the test panels by 17.7% (n=60), which theoretically should have resulted in 4.5% fewer tests being ordered. However, as an estimated 14% of the tests removed were then ordered individually in addition to the panels, 3.9% fewer tests were ordered, yielding an annual saving of about €58,000 (4.5% of the costs of all tests ordered in test panels). The savings amount to 7–8% if the frequently ordered metabolic panel (which was left unchanged) was excluded from the survey. Active intervention by the laboratory in the organisation of test panels results in a reduction in the use of tests and in interesting savings.
Aggregating Dictyostelium discoideum cells possess highly specific receptors for the chemoattractant cAMP on their cell surface. Isolated membranes as well as intact cells are shown to contain a large number of latent cAMP receptors. These are reversibly unmasked in the presence of a high salt concentration (0.1–2 M) or in the presence of millimolar concentrations of Ca 2+ .
Summary We performed a retrospective evaluation of the use of carbohydrate deficient transferrin (CDT) in a general hospital, for diagnosing alcohol abuse. The high specificity for the CDT test and lower sensitivity as reported in the literature were confirmed. Alcohol anamnesis proved rather often to be incomplete. In intensive care medicine, the CDT investigation could be used as a guide to diagnoses and treatment, especially for patients that are difficult to communicate with. For being of use here, results of the CDT determination should be available within a day. CDT proved to be of use also in psychiatric medicine, the test being of help in clarifying the patients acohol addiction.
As a result of the decreased incidence of immunological hydrops fetalis and increased insight, the role of inborn errors of metabolism (IEM) as a cause of hydrops fetalis has acquired increased significance. This growing awareness of the manifestation of IEM in pregnancy has revealed that some 20 of these disorders may cause hydrops fetalis, accounting for a few percent of all cases. These IEM are, for the most part, lysosomal storage diseases. We recommend that standard metabolites and enzymes reflecting lysosomal storage diseases be measured in the amniotic fluid and the amniocytes already withdrawn for karyotyping. The value of the diagnosis of lysosomal storage diseases lies in the opportunity for risk evaluation, genetic counselling and targeted prenatal diagnostics in case of subsequent pregnancies. Obtaining insight into the possible therapestic interventions during the pregnancy in which the hydrops is observed is not a goal of this protocol since the necessary investigations are too time-consuming.