Age-, sex-, and race-related differences in myoglobin concentrations in the serum of healthy persons

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Abstract

A radioimmunoassay was used to study the relation of race, sex, and age to serum myoglobin concentrations in ostensibly healthy individuals: 75 white men, 76 white women, 75 black men, and 66 black women, ranging in age from 20 to 85 years. Mean serum myoglobin values were significantly higher in men than in women in both races (35 vs 31 μg/L for whites and 44 vs 29 μg/L for blacks). Black men had higher values than white men, but no corresponding difference was observed in the female population. Except for the group of black men, which consistently had the highest values for serum myoglobin, values were always higher for the older groups (≥50 years) than the younger, irrespective of race or sex. Serum myoglobin and age were significantly and directly correlated only among white men (r = 0.3408 p < 0.01, n = 75). If results were expressed as a myoglobin/creatinine ratio, the distinctions by race, sex, and age were partly eliminated. Reference intervals for serum myoglobin, expressed both ways, are given for different race, sex, and age groups.

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APA

Chen, I. W., David, R., Maxon, H. R., Sperling, M., & Stein, E. A. (1980). Age-, sex-, and race-related differences in myoglobin concentrations in the serum of healthy persons. Clinical Chemistry, 26(13), 1864–1868. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/26.13.1864

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