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Articles and journal scans about Hemoglobins
Journal Scan
August 2018
Classical presentation of methemoglobinemia treated by a non-classical method – a case report
Hemoglobin is the oxygen-carrying protein contained in red blood cells that ensures delivery of inspired oxygen from lungs to all tissue cells. This process depends on oxygen forming a reversible ionic link with ferrous iron (Fe++) contained within the hemoglobin molecule. Methemoglobin (MetHb) is a dysfunctional form ...
Hemoglobins
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
February 2018
Diagnosis and management of sepsis/septic shock – a review article
As the authors of this recently published review article acknowledge, sepsis is an increasingly common and serious illness that takes the lives of close to a third of those affected. Optimal care of patients with sepsis is delivered in an intensive care unit but rapid early diagnosis, vital for survival, occurs...
Blood gases/acid-base
Hemoglobins
Journal Scan
March 2017
Monitoring patient oxygen status – a review article
Blood gas analysis involves three measurements: blood pH, partial pressure of carbon dioxide in blood plasma (pCO2) and partial pressure of oxygen in blood plasma (pO2).
The first two, pH and pCO2 along with other derived (calculated) parameters (bicarbonate, base excess) generated during blood gas analysis allow...
Blood gases/acid-base
Hemoglobins
Journal Scan
January 2013
Carbon monoxide poisoning – a review article
The incorporation of CO-oximeters in modern blood gas analyzers allows rapid determination of the amount of carboxyhemoglobin in blood. This, in turn, allows rapid diagnosis of carbon monoxide poisoning, the subject of a recently published review.
This wide-ranging review article begins with consideration of the...
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
July 2011
Falsely low SpO2 - an educative case study present
Blood gas analysis (BGA) provides the means for the most accurate assessment of patient oxygenation status; the two relevant blood gas parameters being partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood (pO2(a)), and % hemoglobin oxygen saturation (sO2(a)).
Pulse oximetry, a technology now ubiquitous in all areas of...
Blood gases/acid-base
Quality assurance
Hemoglobins
Journal Scan
July 2011
Anemia treatment in CKD
Anemia, which is defined as hemoglobin (Hb) concentration
The kidneys are essential to the regulation of red-cell production and thereby maintenance of normal Hb concentration because the hormone erythropoietin, which regulates red-cell production, is synthesized in the kidneys. The usually normochromic, normocytic...
Hemoglobins
Kidneys/fluids
Journal Scan
October 2009
Blood glucose and severe trauma
In recent years there has been increasing interest in the significance of the transitory raised blood glucose (hyperglycemia) that very often occurs in individuals suffering critical illness and trauma. A number of studies have shown an association between hyperglycemia and poor outcome. Knowledge in this area is...
Hemoglobins
Journal Scan
October 2008
Limitation of pulse oximetry - a case report
Pulse oximetry provides a simple non-invasive method of monitoring
the oxygenation status of patients by indirectly measuring the
percentage of hemoglobin that is saturated with oxygen, i.e. %
oxygen saturation (SpO2). Pulse oximetry has important
limitations, including inaccurate readings in patients with
inherited...
Hemoglobins
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
October 2007
Methemoglobinemia - two case histories
In health no more than 1-2 % of total hemoglobin is present as methemoglobin. This is a dysfunctional form of hemoglobin that is unable to bind and transport oxygen because the iron atom of the heme moiety is in the ferrous rather then the normal ferric state. Abnormal increase in methemoglobin, a condition called...
Blood gases/acid-base
Hemoglobins