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Articles and journal scans about Blood gases/acid-base
Article
June 2005
Reducing sharps injury risk in intensive care
Five years of data on percutaneous injuries (PIs) from the EPINet multi-hospital sharps injury database at the University of Virginia were analyzed to understand exposure risks faced by personnel in intensive care/critical care settings.
Of 687 PIs in intensive care units (ICUs), nurses had the highest proportion of...
Quality assurance
Blood gases/acid-base
Preanalytical phase
Journal Scan
April 2005
Permissive hypercapnia
Mechanical ventilation is normally adjusted so that pCO2 is
maintained within normal limits (35-45 mmHg). However, the
intensity of ventilation required to sustain a normal pCO2 can
cause mechanical damage to the lungs of patients with acute
respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).
One of the strategies used to
minimize ...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
April 2005
Respiratory failure in severe trauma
Can blood gas results be used to predict respiratory failure in
victims of severe trauma? Many such patients present with metabolic
acidosis, invariably the result of increased lactic acid production
due to hemorrhagic shock. The normal physiological (compensatory)
response to preserve a normal pH in those with...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
April 2005
Diagnosing ketoacidosis
Disturbance of normal acid-base balance is a defining feature of
diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), the acute and potentially
life-threatening complication of diabetes that results from severe
insulin deficiency. The cause of the acidosis in such cases is
abnormal accumulation in blood of the two ketoacids, acetoacetate
and ...
Blood gases/acid-base
Glucose
Journal Scan
April 2005
Choice of blood sample for blood gas analysis
Venous blood is an acceptable alternative to arterial blood for
estimation of bicarbonate by blood gas analysis, according to the
results of a recently published Australian study. Over a six-month
study period, clinicians at the Emergency Department of Western
Hospital in Melbourne simultaneously sampled venous and...
Blood gases/acid-base
Preanalytical phase
Article
January 2005
Permissive Hypercapnia-Continuous Monitoring
Neonatology, perhaps more than any other field in medicine, has undergone dramatic improvements in care over the last several decades. One of the main areas of advancement is the ability to mechanically ventilate premature infants with a variety of neonatal lung conditions.
As survival of premature infants has...
Blood gases/acid-base
Article
January 2005
Pneumatic tube transport of samples for blood gas analysis
The significance of good practice during the pretesting
phase of clinical laboratory investigation cannot be
overemphasized. The production of high-quality, accurate results,
which are clinically useful, depends as much on practice before the
patient’s sample reaches the laboratory as it does on the
analytical phase...
Blood gases/acid-base
Process optimization
Preanalytical phase
Lactate
Article
January 2005
Understanding the principles behind blood gas sensor technology
Today’s blood gas sensors are the result of many
years of gradual improvements and optimizations. The operating
principles behind sensor technology have largely remained
unchanged, even though the size of analyzers and thus of
sensors has decreased remarkably.
However, miniaturization has
created a new challenge: to ...
Preanalytical phase
Blood gases/acid-base
Glucose
Kidneys/fluids
Article
September 2004
Diabetic ketoacidosis
Disturbance of the mechanisms which maintain normal
blood pH is a defining feature of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA),
an acute and life-threatening complication of the chronic
metabolic disease, diabetes.
For this reason diagnosis and
monitoring of DKA invariably include measurement of arterial
blood gases. This...
Electrolytes
Blood gases/acid-base
Preanalytical phase
Glucose
Creatinine/urea
Kidneys/fluids
Point-of-care testing
Article
July 2004
Useful tips to avoid preanalytical errors in blood gas testing: neonatal total bilirubin
50-75 % of all newborns develop jaundice during their first week of life [1,2,3]. The decision behind which treatment is necessary and when it should be initiated is based upon a measurement of the concentration of total bilirubin (ctBil) in serum, plasma or whole blood.
It is therefore obvious that it is important...
Quality assurance
Bilirubin
Preanalytical phase
Hemoglobins
Blood gases/acid-base