Abstract

A study has been made of the variations in monthly mean values of 10 serum constituents in subjects participating in two partly-concurrent long-term epidemiological surveys. Closely similar patterns of variation were found in men in both surveys and in men and women in one survey. During the 6 years of the study, four types of variation of the monthly mean concentrations were identified in varying combinations: abrupt changes of less than 2% not detected by quality control procedures; a gradual drift in mean value; haphazard variations in mean values; and seasonal variations in bilirubin and urea, identical in men and women. The implications of these findings for the design of long-term epidemiological surveys, and the criteria for designating variations as seasonal, are discussed.

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