Agreement between an arterial blood gas analyser and a venous blood analyser in the measurement of potassium in patients in cardiac arrest

被引:21
|
作者
Johnston, HLM
Murphy, R [1 ]
机构
[1] Royal Infirm Edinburgh NHS Trust, Dept Accid & Emergency, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
[2] Univ Edinburgh, Fac Med, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
关键词
D O I
10.1136/emj.2003.013599
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Background and objective: Rapid measurement of potassium is crucial in the resuscitation of patients in cardiac arrest. This is often done on an arterial blood gas sample taken during resuscitation and analysed in an emergency department based blood gas analyser. No-one has assessed how accurate or reliable this is when compared with the traditional method of sending a venous sample to the laboratory for standard analysis. This study looked at the agreement between potassium measurements in arterial blood gas samples and venous blood samples in patients in cardiac arrest. Method: Arterial and venous blood samples were taken at the same time and analysed in the usual way from 50 patients in cardiac arrest. It was found that the mean difference between each pair of arterial and venous potassium measurements was low at 0.106 mmol/l. However, the standard deviation of these differences and subsequently the 95% limits of agreement were wide (-1.182 mmol/ l to 1.394 mmol/ l) that is, 95% of differences will lie between these limits. It is felt that these limits are too wide for safe use in clinical practice. Conclusion: Based on these results, it is advised that arterial blood gas analysers should be used with caution to measure potassium in patients in cardiac arrest.
引用
收藏
页码:269 / 271
页数:3
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Implications of differences between point-of-care blood gas analyser and laboratory analyser potassium results on hyperkalaemia diagnosis & treatment
    Pradhan, Jasmin
    Harding, Andrew M.
    Taylor, Simone E.
    Lam, Que
    INTERNAL MEDICINE JOURNAL, 2023, 53 (11) : 2035 - 2041
  • [2] Arterial blood-volume pulse analyser
    Gunarathne, GPP
    Gunarathne, TR
    IMTC 2002: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 19TH IEEE INSTRUMENTATION AND MEASUREMENT TECHNOLOGY CONFERENCE, VOLS 1 & 2, 2002, : 1249 - 1253
  • [3] Comparison of arterial haemoglobin and electrolyte measurements between an arterial blood gas analyser and the laboratory on the critical care unit
    A Beggs
    M Grounds
    D Bennett
    T Rahman
    Critical Care, 10 (Suppl 1):
  • [4] Measurement of blood acetoacetate and β-hydroxybutyrate in an automatic analyser
    Galán, A
    Hernández, JM
    Jimenez, O
    JOURNAL OF AUTOMATED METHODS & MANAGEMENT IN CHEMISTRY, 2001, 23 (03): : 69 - 76
  • [5] VENOUS OR ARTERIAL BLOOD GAS MEASUREMENT
    LONG, AP
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 1971, 217 (12): : 1706 - &
  • [6] Comparison of sodium and potassium concentrations measured on blood gas analyser and biochemistry laboratory autoanalyser
    Andjelkovic, M.
    Petrovic, M.
    Nikolic, I.
    Zaric, M.
    Pirkovic, M. Stanojevic
    CLINICA CHIMICA ACTA, 2022, 530 : S99 - S99
  • [7] Analytical evaluation of Rapidpoint 400® blood gas analyser
    Magny, É
    Renard, MF
    Launay, JM
    ANNALES DE BIOLOGIE CLINIQUE, 2001, 59 (05) : 622 - 628
  • [8] Evaluation of a patient-dedicated blood gas analyser
    JJ Fox
    TH Clutton-Brock
    Critical Care, 19 (Suppl 1):
  • [9] Potassium Measurement With Point-of-Care Blood Gas Analyzer in Cardiac Arrest
    Ahn, S.
    Kim, W.
    Sohn, C.
    Kim, W.
    Lim, K.
    Seo, D.
    ANNALS OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2011, 58 (04) : S263 - S263
  • [10] Reliable blood glucose measurement with the APEC glucose analyser
    Heinemann, L
    Weyer, C
    Stoffels, M
    Schaden, U
    Heise, T
    DIABETOLOGIA, 1997, 40 : 1400 - 1400