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  #1  
Old November 11th, 2004, 02:40 PM
bones
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the young boys of Rahmalla are a bit safer today.
  #2  
Old November 11th, 2004, 05:57 PM
John Russell
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bones wrote:

the young boys of Rahmalla are a bit safer today.


What? Kerry won after all?

JR

  #3  
Old November 11th, 2004, 07:12 PM
Ken Fortenberry
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bones wrote:

the young boys of Rahmalla are a bit safer today.


Another low IQ, obese, Wal-Mart shopper heard from.

--
Ken Fortenberry
  #4  
Old November 11th, 2004, 07:46 PM
bones
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On Thu, 11 Nov 2004 19:12:27 GMT, Ken Fortenberry
wrote:

bones wrote:

the young boys of Rahmalla are a bit safer today.


Another low IQ, obese, Wal-Mart shopper heard from.



.... hey ken, want to compare liver panal results...?
  #5  
Old November 11th, 2004, 08:18 PM
Ken Fortenberry
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bones wrote:

... hey ken, want to compare liver panal results...?


Uh, no. My liver has been pickled in alcohol since sometime
late in the Carter administration. Your blood pressure is
doubtless healthier than mine too, but I'll kick your arse
on cholesterol levels !! ;-)

--
Ken Fortenberry
  #6  
Old November 11th, 2004, 08:47 PM
bones
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On Thu, 11 Nov 2004 20:18:24 GMT, Ken Fortenberry
wrote:

bones wrote:

... hey ken, want to compare liver panal results...?


Uh, no. My liver has been pickled in alcohol since sometime
late in the Carter administration. Your blood pressure is
doubtless healthier than mine too, but I'll kick your arse
on cholesterol levels !! ;-)



163 total
  #7  
Old November 11th, 2004, 09:09 PM
Ken Fortenberry
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bones wrote:

On Thu, 11 Nov 2004 20:18:24 GMT, Ken Fortenberry
wrote:


bones wrote:

... hey ken, want to compare liver panal results...?


Uh, no. My liver has been pickled in alcohol since sometime
late in the Carter administration. Your blood pressure is
doubtless healthier than mine too, but I'll kick your arse
on cholesterol levels !! ;-)




163 total


I don't remember the exact numbers but at my last physical
the doctor said some folks are paying thousands of dollars
a year to achieve similar numbers. I've been mostly vegetarian
going on 15 years now (not coincidentally I've been living
with a vegetarian going on 15 years now) and that no doubt
helps.

--
Ken Fortenberry
  #8  
Old November 11th, 2004, 09:15 PM
Joe McIntosh
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Default well...


:

bones wrote:

... hey ken, want to compare liver panal results...?


Uh, no. My liver has been pickled in alcohol since sometime
late in the Carter administration. Your blood pressure is
doubtless healthier than mine too, but I'll kick your arse
on cholesterol levels !! ;-)



163 total


Indian Joe notices--well things are calming down on Roff or the members are
getting older.--Last time I passed thru the guys were talking about fist
ter cuffs .
Is that number after LESCOL ?


  #9  
Old November 14th, 2004, 08:46 PM
David Snedeker
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"bones" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 11 Nov 2004 20:18:24 GMT, Ken Fortenberry
wrote:

bones wrote:

163 total


No expert on this but have a bit of personal experience with this and . . .
Beware of Doc's who are still using total # as a screen. . . its the
components you need to track (good and bad C), and the ratios, as well as
the triglyiserides. That said mine ain't so good and my total is similar to
yours. My guess is that you probably have a handle on it, so my advise is
meant for the broader group.

Doc should cut you copies of whole lipids panel results . . . same for other
tests (liver function etc) . You paid for it, you should get a copy. If
your Doc won't break it down or share the reports, **** can him/her. There
are Docs who skated by in stat and who misinterpret the reports. Its easy
to check yourself if you were half awake back in college, or even if you
have to brush up; the stats they use in these tests are very basic stuff.
(Actually some of it is so primitive as to make you shudder, and some of the
specious stuff used in drug trials is even worse, but that is another rant).

And . . . take the test measures (lipids panel, good and bad C levels,
trigl. liver panel etc) and make a simple time series table of the numbers.
Making graphs is even better. the point is to see the trends. The Docs are
just mostly looking at the most current levels, and comparing them to the
current recommended and warning levels. They usually don't have time to work
up their own time series. I bring MY time series in and we add the most
recent test results. Docs WANT to practice good medicine and they know that
the time series is a better context for comparison that just the most recent
results. If the DOC doesn't want to see the time series . . . you gotta
wonder.

Side note: Early on in my heart problem sojourn I was reading a lipids panel
test from a major hospital lab, and a ratio looked funny. I checked back to
get the component numbers and did the calculation manually myself. Long
story short . . . I found that there was an error in the computerized
calculation which I called in. Checking back on earlier tests I found the
same discrepancy. The calculation was simple but the programming was sloppy.
Lesson: techies rarely get it right the first time, "fixing" **** is what
justifies keeping them around; you need to learn more about the common test
metrics yourself.

Dave
Ideology Sucks



  #10  
Old November 14th, 2004, 08:46 PM
David Snedeker
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default well...


"bones" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 11 Nov 2004 20:18:24 GMT, Ken Fortenberry
wrote:

bones wrote:

163 total


No expert on this but have a bit of personal experience with this and . . .
Beware of Doc's who are still using total # as a screen. . . its the
components you need to track (good and bad C), and the ratios, as well as
the triglyiserides. That said mine ain't so good and my total is similar to
yours. My guess is that you probably have a handle on it, so my advise is
meant for the broader group.

Doc should cut you copies of whole lipids panel results . . . same for other
tests (liver function etc) . You paid for it, you should get a copy. If
your Doc won't break it down or share the reports, **** can him/her. There
are Docs who skated by in stat and who misinterpret the reports. Its easy
to check yourself if you were half awake back in college, or even if you
have to brush up; the stats they use in these tests are very basic stuff.
(Actually some of it is so primitive as to make you shudder, and some of the
specious stuff used in drug trials is even worse, but that is another rant).

And . . . take the test measures (lipids panel, good and bad C levels,
trigl. liver panel etc) and make a simple time series table of the numbers.
Making graphs is even better. the point is to see the trends. The Docs are
just mostly looking at the most current levels, and comparing them to the
current recommended and warning levels. They usually don't have time to work
up their own time series. I bring MY time series in and we add the most
recent test results. Docs WANT to practice good medicine and they know that
the time series is a better context for comparison that just the most recent
results. If the DOC doesn't want to see the time series . . . you gotta
wonder.

Side note: Early on in my heart problem sojourn I was reading a lipids panel
test from a major hospital lab, and a ratio looked funny. I checked back to
get the component numbers and did the calculation manually myself. Long
story short . . . I found that there was an error in the computerized
calculation which I called in. Checking back on earlier tests I found the
same discrepancy. The calculation was simple but the programming was sloppy.
Lesson: techies rarely get it right the first time, "fixing" **** is what
justifies keeping them around; you need to learn more about the common test
metrics yourself.

Dave
Ideology Sucks



 




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