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Date: | Tue, 12 May 1998 07:57:23 EDT |
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Barb writes,
<< You will probably get different percentages from different samples,
depending on time of day it was expressed, whether it is from the
beginning or near the end of a feeding, what the interval was from the
last feeding, etc.
>>
If you are going to do this, you need to get a 24 hour sample; some from each
feed, some taken from the beginning of the feed, some from the middle, some
from the end -- equal amounts from each (say a capillary tube of each sample).
Then mix the entire 24 hour sample and spin down to get an appropriate
reading.
Jan
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