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Assays / Hormones / Proinsulin (plasma,
serum)
Clinical use
Differential diagnosis of documented
spontaneous hypoglycaemia.
Application
Autonomous secretions of some, but
not all, insulinomas contain an abnormally high proportion of immunoreactive
proinsulin. An elevated blood level can confirm this diagnosis but
a low (normal) result cannot exclude it.
Patient preparation
Hypoglycaemia, spontaneous or whilst
fasting, must first be established by regular monitoring of blood
glucose levels. Blood (10 mL) collected in a plain vacutainer or
syringe, when the whole blood glucose concentration (confirmed by
laboratory analysis) is less than 2.2 mmol/L (or less than 2.5 mmol/L
in patients over 60 years), should be used for the tests. Vacutainers
(7 mL, red top) may be used for blood collection.
Sample preparation
Transfer the blood to a plain tube.
Separate the serum, preferably within 30 min of collection and freeze
at -20C. Larger volumes of sample (5 mL) are required for additional
studies such as IGF-1 measurements or sulphonylurea identification.
Small blood samples from neonates should be transferred to a heparin
tube so that the maximum volume of plasma may be collected. A minimum
volume of 0.5 mL should be stored at -20C. Visible haemolysis may
invalidate the result.
Send samples to the SAS laboratory. Ensure they
remain frozen during transport. Record the blood glucose concentration
on the request form.
Reference range
An interpretation of the result(s)
will be provided where sufficient information accompanies the request.
For further clarification please contact the SAS laboratory.
Centre offering this assay
Guildford.
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