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Articles and journal scans about
Journal Scan
April 2012
Acid-base disturbance in diabetes
Unless suffering some unrelated acute/critical illness, diabetic patients are only usually submitted for arterial blood gas analysis if they are suspected of suffering diabetic ketoacidosis, the potentially life-threatening acute complication of diabetes that is almost invariably associated with severe hyperglycemia....
Blood gases/acid-base
Electrolytes
Article
April 2012
Why measure blood gases? A three-part introduction for the novice. Part 2.
Arterial blood gases (ABG), a clinical test that involves measurement of the pH of arterial blood and the amount of oxygen and carbon dioxide dissolved in arterial blood, is routinely used in the diagnosis and monitoring of predominantly critically/acutely ill patients being cared for in hospital emergency rooms and...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
January 2012
Adult reference intervals for blood gases
The clinical value of any patient test result depends on the quality of the reference interval used for its comparison (interpretation), so that good laboratory medicine practice demands continuous review of reference intervals. There is a paucity of published study aimed at validating the health-associated reference...
Blood gases/acid-base
Quality assurance
Journal Scan
January 2012
Discordance between measured and calculated bicarbonate - a case study
Plasma bicarbonate concentration, a parameter generated during arterial blood gas analysis, is essential to the assessment of patient acid-base status. Blood gas analyzers do not have the capacity to directly measure bicarbonate; instead, it is calculated from measured pH and pCO2(a), using the Henderson-Hasselbalch...
Blood gases/acid-base
Quality assurance
Electrolytes
Journal Scan
January 2012
Breast milk jaundice - a review
Serum bilirubin estimation, which has for some years now been available on point-of-care analyzers, including blood gas analyzers, is probably the most frequently requested blood test in neonatal medicine.
This is because increased serum/plasma bilirubin concentration (hyperbilirubinemia) and consequent jaundice is...
Bilirubin
Neonatology
Journal Scan
January 2012
Venous versus arterial blood for gas analysis
Although arterial blood remains the gold standard sample for blood gas analysis, it is, compared with peripheral venous blood, a more difficult sample to obtain, and its collection is more painful and hazardous for the patient. These considerations have fuelled a growing interest in study aimed at establishing if...
Blood gases/acid-base
Preanalytical phase
Quality assurance
Article
January 2012
Why measure blood gases? A three-part introduction for the novice - Part 1
Arterial blood gas (ABG) analysis generates a number of parameters (listed in BOX 5) that together allow assessment of pulmonary gas exchange, blood oxygenation and acid-base balance. These physiological functions of the blood, respiratory and renal systems are disturbed in a range of respiratory and non-respiratory...
Blood gases/acid-base
Hemoglobins
Journal Scan
October 2011
Point-of-care creatinine testing in radiology
The necessary administration of image-enhancing agents to patients prior to radiological investigation is associated with risk of two serious adverse effects: nephrogenic systemic fibrosis (NSF) and contrast-induced nephropathy (CIN). The risk only applies to those patients with renal disease, either acute kidney...
Kidneys/fluids
Point-of-care testing
Hemoglobins
Journal Scan
October 2011
Metabolic alkalosis caused by genetic defect - an unusual case history
Metabolic alkalosis is a disturbance of acid-base balance, with many possible causes, characterized by primary increase in blood bicarbonate (HCO3) and pH. Hypoventilation is the normal compensatory respiratory response to metabolic alkalosis. This results in increased pCO2 and, if the metabolic alkalosis is...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
October 2011
Pneumatic tube transport of samples for blood gas analysis
Many hospitals have a pneumatic tube system (PTS) that is routinely used to transport blood samples rapidly to the central laboratory, but the notion that such systems can be used to transport samples destined for blood gas analysis is challenged by the results of a recent study.
This prospective study, focusing on...
Blood gases/acid-base
Process optimization
Preanalytical phase