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Dive into the research topics where Ronald G Sommer is active.

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Featured researches published by Ronald G Sommer.


Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine | 2004

Near-patient testing for infection using urinalysis and immuno-chromatography strips.

Michael J. Pugia; Ronald G Sommer; Hai-Hang Kuo; Paul F. Corey; Darryl L. Gopual; John A. Lott

Abstract Urinary tract infections require costly confirmatory tests such as a urine culture to establish the diagnosis. Elimination of the culture step would save resources; diagnosis and treatment could begin in hours rather than days. We tested a new dip-and-read strip that uses immuno-chromatography (IC) to detect infectious agents in urine. We used a goat-derived polyclonal antibody with reactivity to the cell-wall proteins of Escherichia coli (E. coli). Fluorescein linked to the anti-E. coli antibody served to trap the bacteria on a strip coated with an anti-fluorescein mouse antibody. Blue latex particles were linked to anti-E. coli antibodies by standard methods and were used for detection of E. coli. We found that the combination of leukocyte esterase and nitrite dipsticks gave negative predictive values of 93% for culture-negative urines, i.e., there were very few false-negative results. Using the same dipsticks on culture-positive specimens, the positive predictive values were unacceptably low; we obtained too many false-positive values. By contrast, the IC strips gave negative predictive values of 89%. The major advantage of the IC strips is that the positive predictive values were higher, i.e., there were fewer false-positive results. The combined use of both IC strips and urinalysis dipsticks offers the best strategy for diagnosing infection with dipsticks. The IC strip test could reduce the necessity of a urine culture in patients with suspected infections and provide rapid point-of-care testing.


Archive | 1995

Quantitative detection of analytes on immunochromatographic strips

Ronald G Sommer


Clinical Chemistry | 2005

Microfluidic tool box as technology platform for hand-held diagnostics.

Michael J. Pugia; Gert Blankenstein; Ralf-Peter Peters; James A. Profitt; Klaus Kadel; Thomas Willms; Ronald G Sommer; Hai Hang Kuo; Lloyd S. Schulman


Archive | 1995

Assay for the determination of protein in a biological sample.

James P. Albarella; Angela A. Michaels; Michael J. Pugia; Ronald G Sommer


Journal of Clinical Laboratory Analysis | 2001

Albuminuria and proteinuria in hospitalized patients as measured by quantitative and dipstick methods.

Michael J. Pugia; Jane F. Wallace; John A. Lott; Ronald G Sommer; Karl E. Luke; Zak K. Shihabi; Michael Sheehan; Jean M. Bucksa


Clinica Chimica Acta | 2004

The uristatin dipstick is useful in distinguishing upper respiratory from urinary tract infections

Michael J. Pugia; Ronald G Sommer; Paul F. Corey; Linda Anderson; Shannon Gleason; Saeed A. Jortani; Ronald J. Elin; Darryl L. Gopual; Roland Valdes; John A. Lott


Archive | 1992

Test-strip containing merocyanine and nitro or nitroso substituted polyhalogenated phenol-sulfonephthaleins as protein indicators

Paul F. Corey; Angela A. Michaels; Ronald G Sommer


Archive | 2002

Use of dual conjugated labels in the elimination of serum interference in immunochromatographic assays

Ronald G Sommer; Lloyd S. Schulman; Daya C. Wijesuriya


Archive | 1996

Sol particle decay protection immunoassay

Ronald G Sommer


Archive | 1997

Immunoassay protecting sol particle from disintegration

Ronald G Sommer; ロナルド・ジー・ソマー

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