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HAEMATOLOGICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL LABORATORY VALUES IN AN AMBULATORY ELDERLY POPULATION: AN ANALYSIS OF THE EFFECTS OF AGE, SEX AND DRUGS
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1983
Year
HypertensionElectrolyte DisorderAgingElderly SubjectsSex And DrugsGeriatric MedicineAn AnalysisRenal FunctionHealthy AgingLongevityHematologyElectrolyte DisturbanceClinical ChemistryPublic HealthChronic Kidney DiseaseLaboratory MedicineNormal RangesGeriatricsKidney FailureLower LimitCardiovascular DiseaseForensic ToxicologyMedicineNephrologyEmergency Medicine
Haematological and biochemical test results of 2242 ambulatory, elderly subjects in a health screening programme were used to study normal ranges for these values. A large percentage of leucocyte and erythrocyte counts and haemoglobin and haematocrit values were below the reference range of the laboratory performing the tests. Over 25% of erythrocyte counts were below the lower limit of normal, while in men 50% of mean corpuscular haemoglobin values were above the upper limit of normal. A large percentage of serum potassium concentrations were below the lower range of normal, while a high percentage of blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, triglycerides, and lactic dehydrogenase concentrations fell above the upper limit of normal. When subjects using drugs were compared to a nondrug-taking group, significant differences were found in serum potassium, chloride, carbon dioxide, creatinine, uric acid and serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase concentrations.