24 research outputs found

    IFCC reference measurement procedure for substance concentration determination of total carbon dioxide in blood, plasma or serum

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    A reference measurement procedure for substance concentration determination of total CO, in blood, plasma (the anticoagulant is usually heparin) or serum is described. The document covers the principle of the method, the materials and equipment needed and essential aspects of the procedure. The substance concentration of total CO, in blood, plasma or serum is accurately determined and therefore this procedure is recommended for assigning reference values to reference materials and for blood gas quality assurance in laboratories and by manufacturers of blood gas equipment

    Use of ion-selective electrodes for blood-electrolyte analysis. Recommendations for nomenclature, definitions and conventions

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    This paper will familiarize the reader with the terms used to describe the behavior of ion-selective electrodes, particularly in relation to their use in clinical chemistry for determination of blood electrolyte cations. It serves as an introduction to a series of papers dealing with important cations in blood, namely calcium, sodium, and potassium. The detailed relationships between the ion activity determined by means of ion-selective electrode potentiometry in undiluted specimens, and the total substance concentration measured by flame atomic-emission spectrometry are described by flow chart and equations. Adoption of a convention for reporting results is recommended. The Working Group on Selective Electrodes has taken into account recent revisions of IUPAC recommendations on nomenclature and selectivity coefficient determinations for ion-selective electrodes, and benefited from the experience of a member of the WG, who was also involved in the IUPAC discussions. Nomenclature for determined quantities follows previous IUPAC/IFCC joint recommendations

    Recommendation on mean molar activity coefficients and single ion activity coefficients of solutions for calibration of ion-selective electrodes for sodium, potassium and calcium determination (Reprinted from J Clin Chem Clin Biochem)

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    In principle, flame photometry measures substance concentration, and ion-selective electrodes (ISEs) measure ion activity. However, the situation regarding the comparison of results from the two techniques when applied to blood plasma is complex. The problem can be approached experimentally from the point of view of calibration of ion-selective electrodes with concentration calibrators, and similar procedures are adopted for commercial ISE-based clinical analysers. Nevertheless, there is interest in the evaluation of single ion activities in blood plasma and solutions simulating its ionic composition. Solutions are proposed for calibrating ion-selective electrodes for the determination of sodium, potassium and calcium. It is recommended that the values for single ion activities derived from the Pitzer treatment of mixed electrolyte solutions be adopted, because, although this has some empirical features, it has a sounder theoretical basis than the previously used Stokes-Robinson-Bates hydration approach
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