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Method comparison and generation of plasma biochemistry RIs for the White rhinoceros on a point‐of‐care and wet chemistry analyzer
Author(s) -
Hooijberg Emma H.,
Steenkamp Gerhard,
Buss Peter,
Goddard Amelia
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
veterinary clinical pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.537
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1939-165X
pISSN - 0275-6382
DOI - 10.1111/vcp.12490
Subject(s) - rhinoceros , globulin , creatinine , albumin , chromatography , zoology , spectrum analyzer , chemistry , reference range , veterinary medicine , medicine , biology , electrical engineering , engineering
Background Plasma biochemistry analysis may aid the management of White rhinoceros with poaching or other injuries. Analyzer‐ and species‐specific RI s are necessary to evaluate health status and identify abnormalities. Objectives The purpose of the study was to perform a comparison study between the IDEXX VetTest and Roche Cobas Integra 400 Plus, and to generate analyzer‐specific RI s for White rhinoceros according to published guidelines. Methods Comparison was carried out using White rhinoceros plasma samples from healthy and diseased animals. Reference intervals for albumin, ALT , AST , CK , creatinine, GGT , globulins, glucose, phosphorus, total proteins, and urea were determined from a sample group of chemically immobilized healthy adult White rhinoceros from the Kruger National Park, South Africa. Results There was a significant analytic bias for all analytes between the 2 analyzers. Results for glucose and total protein were clinically equivalent based on total allowable error limits. Reference intervals were generated from 51 individuals (26 male, 25 female) for all analytes except ALT on the VetTest. Discussion The type, direction, and magnitude of bias between the VetTest and Cobas appeared to be species‐ and analyzer‐specific, when compared to other studies. These measures of bias may be used for comparability testing. Reference intervals for total proteins (VetTest 77–108 g/L, Cobas 77–110 g/L) and globulins (VetTest 47–79 g/L, Cobas 51–87 g/L) were high compared to other uneven‐toed ungulates. Conclusion Plasma samples from White rhinoceros can be evaluated on both the VetTest and Cobas. Results from this study will aid conservation efforts directed toward this species.