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Articles and journal scans about Blood gases/acid-base
Article
April 2004
Setting the record straight on shunt
The understanding and management of ventilation-perfusion (V/Q) relationships represents a cornerstone of intensive care unit (ICU) patient management.
The physiologic shunt calculation can reliably reflect the degree of gas exchange attributable to intrapulmonary disease or intracardiac shunting regardless of other ...
Blood gases/acid-base
Hemoglobins
Article
April 2004
The merit of routine cord blood measurement at birth
Cord blood ph measurement at birth, using relatively simple and non-invasive methods, provides obstetricians and perinatologists with an objective and sensitive measure for the condition of the infant during the final stage of birth.
As long as certain criteria are observed, the reported values are reliable. Routine ...
Neonatology
Blood gases/acid-base
Lactate
Article
April 2004
The practice of cord gas analysis in United Kingdom and Germany
Apgar scores and umbilical artery pH have traditionally been used as objective measures of neonatal asphyxia. According to the literature, the practice of cord gas analysis varies greatly both between and within countries - whether analysis is performed, whether it is routine at all births and why it is performed...
Blood gases/acid-base
Neonatology
Glucose
Article
February 2004
The new CLIA quality control regulations and blood gas testing
In the U.S. all clinical laboratory determinations, including blood gas testing performed at point of care (POC) or in the central laboratory, is regulated by the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA).
Congress passed CLIA to ensure accurate, reliable, and timely test results regardless of...
Point-of-care testing
Blood gases/acid-base
Quality assurance
Article
January 2004
Ole Siggaard-Andersen: The man behind the legend
When it comes to acid base, there is no getting around the name of Ole Siggaard-Andersen (OSA). acutecaretesting.org talks to the world-renowned Danish professor, who has become a legend in the field of blood gas.
Blood gases/acid-base
Lactate
Article
January 2004
Useful tips to avoid preanalytical errors in blood gas testing: metabolites
Measurement of glucose and lactate after 30 minutes of storage at room temperature can give deviating results of up to 5 % [1,2] and 29 % of the reference value [3] respectively [1,4], due to in vitro glycolysis
Glucose and lactate are both important parameters in the surveillance of patients in critical care...
Preanalytical phase
Glucose
Quality assurance
Lactate
Blood gases/acid-base
Article
October 2003
Useful tips to avoid preanalytical errors in blood gas testing: electrolytes
Preanalytical errors are said to be the reason for up to 75 % [1] of all errors in laboratory medicine. The diagnostic consequences depend on the magnitude of the preanalytical error.
In worst case, these errors may lead to mistreatment of patients; in all cases, these errors are an extra workload for the hospital...
Preanalytical phase
Electrolytes
Quality assurance
Glucose
Hemoglobins
Blood gases/acid-base
Article
July 2003
All about base excess – to BE or not to BE
In 1948, Singer and Hastings introduced the concept of buffer base (BB). The change in BB from "normal" was called deltaBB (ΔBB). This change in BB was an expression of the non-respiratory (metabolic) component of an acid-base disturbance. This was the first approximation to base excess.
In the 1950s, Astrup and...
Blood gases/acid-base
Hemoglobins
Article
Article
March 2003
What is p50
p50 is a shorthand representation of hemoglobin-oxygen affinity. A lower p50 is protective in ambient hypoxemia, whereas increasing the p50 should be beneficial in hypoxia due to lung disease, anemia, and tissue ischemia.
Despite encouraging theoretical and experimental data, it is not yet established that...
Blood gases/acid-base
Hemoglobins