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Showing 487 pages, articles and journal scans about ""
Journal Scan
April 2008
Reduced pO2 - an unusual case history
In health the partial pressure of oxygen (pO2) in arterial blood is maintained between 10.6 and 13.3 kPa (80-100 mmHg). Hypoxemia (reduced arterial pO2) is usually a signal of significant respiratory or cardiac disease and respiratory failure is defined as arterial blood pO2 < 8 kPa (
So when arterial blood gas...
Blood gases/acid-base
Preanalytical phase
Article
January 2008
Point-of-care testing; systems re-engineering of healthcare provision to reduce errors, and improve outcomes
Modern analytical devices for testing biological fluids, such as blood, have now developed a sophistication that ensures the quality of the analytical result is capable of matching that achieved in the central laboratory.
Complementary developments are focused on reducing operator-related and connectivity-related...
Point-of-care testing
Information management
Process optimization
Article
January 2008
Measurement of circulating glucose: The problem of inconsistent sample and methodology
There are few medical diagnoses that depend solely on the result of a single blood test, but diabetes mellitus, which is defined by concentration of circulating glucose, is one that does.
Quite apart from its long established role in diagnosis as well as life-long monitoring of diabetes, measurement of circulating...
Glucose
Hemoglobins
Preanalytical phase
Article
January 2008
Use of local anesthesia for arterial punctures
Reprinted from AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CRITICAL CARE, November 2006, Volume 15, No 6, 595-599 Hudson TL, Dukes SF, Reilly K. Use of local anesthesia for arterial puncture.
Copyright with permission from American Journal of Critical Care
BACKGROUND
Except for intravenous therapy, arterial access is the most common...
Blood gases/acid-base
Preanalytical phase
Journal Scan
January 2008
Lactate measurement – point of care versus the laboratory
Lactate measurement is important for diagnostic and prognostic assessment of the critically ill. Traditionally, lactate has been measured on serum/plasma samples in the central laboratory, but modern blood gas and other point-of-care analyzers now provide the means for real-time monitoring of lactate on whole blood at ...
Point-of-care testing
Lactate
Journal Scan
January 2008
Pathogenesis and treatment of hyponatremia
Reduced plasma sodium concentration (hyponatremia), the most common electrolyte abnormality in hospitalized patients, is the subject of a recently published review. Disordered secretion of the pituitary hormone vasopressin (alternative name, antidiuretic hormone ADH) is central to the pathogenesis of hyponatremia for...
Electrolytes
Journal Scan
January 2008
Arterial catheter placement more difficult in women
Critically ill patients often require frequent monitoring of blood gases and the arterial blood required for these analyses is most conveniently sampled via an indwelling arterial catheter; arterial catheterization also provides the means for continuous monitoring of blood pressure.
Of all the invasive procedures...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
January 2008
Cord blood gas analysis - a review
Umbilical cord blood gas analysis has for many years been recommended for assessment of newborn babies after high-risk delivery associated with possible hypoxic stress and consequent risk of permanent brain damage. More recently there has been an increasing trend towards its routine use after all deliveries.
With...
Blood gases/acid-base
Neonatology
Journal Scan
January 2008
Cholesterol-lowering drug may benefit COPD patients
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a common condition of the elderly affecting an estimated 10 % of those over the age of 60 years, is characterized by an accelerated long-term decline in lung function due to inflammation-induced lung damage. Arterial blood gases are routinely used to monitor patients with...
Blood gases/acid-base