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#1 | |||
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Junior Member
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Here are my blood test results for "Interpretation" part.
Under the PE Value it says: "SPE1" Then it says: "The SPE pattern appears essentially unremarkable. Evidence of monoclonal protein is not apparent." What does this mean? Is there some sort of pattern that showed up? Or, no pattern at all showed up? Also, did any other protein show up? The other values are in range. Thank you. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | Ishmetd (02-24-2013) |
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#2 | |||
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Senior Member
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Your test appears to be negative...which is obviously good news.
I am by no means an expert in this, but I believe there are only two light chains of the monoclonal proteins they look for: Kappa and Lambda. You apparently have neither present. You should have no worries. |
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#3 | |||
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Junior Member
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Are there other proteins or patterns that they look for? Other than monoclonal. Also, what does the "SPE1" mean?
Like I said, the values were normal. However, the Alpha 1 value is 0.2. The range is 0.1 - 0.4. This makes it on the lower end of normal. Does that have any significance? Last edited by QJayde5; 02-22-2013 at 11:32 AM. |
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#4 | ||
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Magnate
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--stands for "serum protein electrophoresis one" which is simply a testing protocol that looks through your profile of serum proteins for rogue antibodies (monoclonal or M-proteins, which can be associated with blood cancers and, though cross-reactivities, cause neuropathy).
If you have neuropathy, though, the more specific test for this is the immunofixaton electrophoresis (IFE) with globulin enumeration. A serum protein electrophoresis will tell you how much alpha, beta, and gamma globulins there are and if any are in too great a supply, but small elevations in monoclonals may be obscured in the overall gamma globulin figures. An immunofication of serum and urine will break apart the specific types of gamma globulin (IgA, IgM and IgG), enumerate them, and see if any of the protein chains are monoclonal. Take a look at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immunofixation http://www.wardelab.com/21-2.html |
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#5 | |||
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Junior Member
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glenntaj: Is this what you meant by "immunofixaton electrophoresis (IFE) with globulin enumeration?":
I got the report from the lab. The report says "Serum Protein Electrophoresis, RFX to Immunofixation." It includes the results, a graph, and some sort of "stain" picture. It mentions Fraction and Percentage also. Under the graph part, the fraction for Beta says 14.0%. I don't know the range for it. But I found one online. It says 8.5-13.7. This would make it high. Would that have any significance? Thank you. |
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#6 | ||
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Magnate
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--you could list what it says in more detail.
Normally, a serum protein electrophoresis divides the blood proteins into the part that is albumin and then subdivides the part that is globulin into alpha, beta, and gamma globulins. An immunofixation electrophoresis goes further in that it enumerates and types the gamma globulins (antibodies) into A, G and M fractions (these are the proteins involved in the immune response) and looks for any rogue or monoclonal antibody types. It's certainly possible they did both in your testing profile. The immunofixation is preferred, though, as small monoclonal increases can be obscured in the gamma portion of a serum electrophoresis. That beta globulin number is not that far out of range, although the range does vary from lab to lab. High beta globulins can come from a number of inflammatory causes, estrogen and other drug therapies, even from high cholesterol levels, so they're not very specific. Generally high levels of gamma globulins have more clinical significance, as they are found in long term inflammatory/autoimmune disease, many infectious disorders, and in certain blood disorders. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | mrsD (02-27-2013) |
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