Mrs. Eleanor Park, 68, came in for fatigue. Her TSH was 3.9 mIU/L—within the manufacturer’s range but above Aliyah’s verified upper limit of 3.2. Using the lab’s new narrow interval, the computer flagged it as Abnormal-High . The junior resident started her on low-dose levothyroxine.
“That’s too narrow,” her senior technologist, Marcus, said, frowning at the scatter plot. “Manufacturer says 0.4 to 4.0. If we use ours, we’ll flag half our outpatients as abnormal.” clsi ep28
Mrs. Park wasn’t abnormal. Aliyah’s reference population was just too young. Using the lab’s new narrow interval, the computer
And Aliyah learned that “normal” is not a number printed in a manual or even a percentiles from a tidy dataset. It is a fragile, shifting border between biology and statistics—and the job of a clinical chemist is not just to measure, but to interpret who, exactly, is in the room when you draw the line. “Manufacturer says 0
Aliyah nodded. “But EP28 says if we have 120 subjects, nonparametric ranking is the gold standard. The 2.5th and 97.5th percentiles are 0.6 and 3.2. That’s our truth.”