Norepinephrine Test
Baseline
Bogus
The following Norepinephrine
Test statements are true:
-
Baseline urinary
Norepinephrine
Test
prior to treatment
is of no
value.
-
Baseline urinary
Norepinephrine
Test
prior to treatment
has no value in
diagnosing disease or selecting
a nutrient starting dose.
-
Serotonin,
dopamine, norepinephrine,
epinephrine
do
not cross the blood brain barrier.
-
Urinary
Norepinephrine Test
of serotonin and dopamine
is of no value
if the phases are not determined.
-
Urinary
serotonin and dopamine
is not serotonin and dopamine
filtered by the kidneys then
excreted into the urine, it is
serotonin and dopamine synthesized by the kidneys then excreted into the urine.
-
Urinary
serotonin and dopamine are not
serotonin and dopamine
neurotransmitter molecules that have
been in the brain or peripheral system,
they are neurotransmitters synthesized by the kidneys
Differences between laboratories doing
testing of neurotransmitters
NeuroResearch Clinics relies exclusively
on DBS Labs Norepinephrine
Test in
treatment of disease. DBS Labs
is directed by Tom Uncini, MD hospital
based pathologist, dual board certified
in laboratory medicine. Dr. Uncini is the medical
director of two hospital labs. Dr.
Uncini is also on the faculty of the
University of Minnesota Medical School.
Urinary testing produced by DBS
Labs is of hospital caliber. Between Dr. Uncini and his lab manager there are over 50 years of hospital based laboratory experience.
The
experience and credentials of DBS Labs
stand in contrast to the other labs
which have no hospital based board
certified laboratory medicine
pathologist directing the lab, no medical license, no hospital privileges, no clinic, no patients, and no patient care experience.
These labs hold out they have the
expertise to tell doctors how to treat
their patients when lab results are
reported.
On
split sample testing results of laboratories
advocating baseline testing do not
correlate with DBS Lab results. These non-MD labs
are the labs that are recommending "baseline urinary
Norepinephrine Test" prior to
treatment even though there is no correlation
between testing prior to treatment and once
treatment is initiated. |