98

Dungy/ Morgan/Heotis/ Branson/ Adams

14

qT

wv

tT

T

T

T

13+

»

Fig. 1. Age-specific values of Hb in
Marshallese children. ——- = Mean.

=

--- = median: ...... = mean, with Hb

2

1

al

,

y

88

xn

as

'

t

F

T+

T

exclusions defined by Dallman and
Siimes [7]; ----- = same as ......, but
without exclusion of any Hb values

from subjects with Hb higher than

mean.

T

86}

4

B44

4

got

4

80}

4

= val
>

4

sions defined by Dallman and Siimes
[7]; ----- = sameas. ......, but without ex-

4

clusion of MCV values from subjects

4

with Hb higher than mean.

dian; ...... = mean, with MCV exciu-

$ 76

&

Fig. 2. Age-specific values for
mean corpuscular volume in Marshal= Mean; --- = melese children.

—
2

.

4

\

6

,

8

i

10

—

12

14

Age, years

were found to be 8.9 and 4.5%, respectively (table ITT).
In estimating the prevalence of iron deficiency it was
found that 12 of 412 children tested (2.9%) had an
FEP which, by laboratory criteria, was ‘definitely’
elevated (> 60 ug/dl). The MCV was below the limits
for normal set by Dallman and Siimes(7] for 21 of the
538 children tested (3.9%).

Discussion

Whatis the best way to determine the normal range
of Hb in a population of infants and children? Which
values should be included in the analysis and which
values excluded? The reported normal ranges for Hb
tend to be similar even though the exclusion limits
may be derived differently. The lower limit for normal Hb in children aged 3-5 years has been placed at
11.0, 11.0, 10.9 or 11.2 g/dl using 4 different approaches [7, 9-11}. Nevertheless, it is important to

5012548

minimize systematic bias [12]. The distribution of Hb
values in a normal population is known to be Gaussian, or nearly so [13], but abnormal values need not
be so distributed. In populations where diseases associated with anemia are prominent, skewing of the total population’s Hb distribution will be toward lower
levels. Smoking will skew values upward. Mean values will be shifted similarly. Therefore, it is an oversimplification to exclude high and low values of
equivalent deviation from the mean (or median) if
clinical experience suggests one pattern of deviation
greatly predominates. Hb levels above the mean (or
median) should be included in derivation of the normal range of Hb in children since a pathologically
elevated Hb level in childhood is an infrequent occurrence and iron deficiency is common. Using this approach, the present analysis detected a small but
systematic bias in the method used by Dallman and
Siimes [7] which is apparent at every year for ages
1-13 (fig. 1). Because of the evidence of systematic

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