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Electrophoretic fractionations of lipoproteins in dogs: Intra- and inter-assay imprecision and effects of different storage conditions
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Electrophoretic fractionations of lipoproteins in dogs: Intra- and inter-assay imprecision and effects of different storage conditions

Saverio Paltrinieri, Gabriele Rossi and Alessia Giordano
Veterinary clinical pathology, Vol.54(1), pp.53-63
2025
PMID: 39734254

Abstract

Animals Blood Preservation - veterinary Dogs - blood Electrophoresis - veterinary Electrophoresis, Agar Gel - veterinary Lipoproteins - blood Lipoproteins - isolation & purification Reproducibility of Results Specimen Handling - veterinary
Background Lipoprotein fractions are reported to be unstable in stored human samples, and there is a paucity of information on the analytical precision of electrophoretic separation of lipoproteins in canine serum samples. Objective The aim of this study was to assess the effects of intra- and inter-assay imprecision and of storage conditions on the electrophoretic separation of canine lipoproteins. Methods Imprecision was assessed by calculating the coefficient of variation (CV) of five replicates of six serum samples run in two sequential runs of agarose gel lipoprotein electrophoresis. The effect of storage was assessed with a Friedmann test by comparing the results of samples analyzed after sampling (T0) and after 24 and 48 h at room temperature or stored at 4°C and after 7, 14, 21 days, 1, 2, and 3 months at −20°C or at −80°C. Moreover, electrophoretograms obtained after storage were visually analyzed by two observers in a blind manner to assess whether storage alters the electrophoretic profile. Results The imprecision of high-density lipoproteins (HDL), low-density lipoproteins (LDL), very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL), and chylomicrons were respectively 0.8%–11.5%, 2.4%–22.7%, 2.3%–11.5%, and 12.5%–105.2%. Compared with T0, HDL significantly decreased, and LDL significantly increased over time in all the storage conditions, whereas VLDL significantly increased only in frozen samples, and chylomicrons did not significantly differ. In frozen samples, deviations from baseline values were lower than the imprecision of the method, and visual misclassifications of electrophoretograms were rare. Conclusions Despite minimal variation in the percentage of some fractions, freezing does not influence the interpretation of canine lipidograms.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.68 Lipids
1.68.69 Lipoprotein Metabolism
Web Of Science research areas
Veterinary Sciences
ESI research areas
Plant & Animal Science
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