|
|
||||||||
Clinical Chemistry, Vol 21, 685-693, Copyright © 1975 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry
1 Department of Medical Physics, Free University, Amsterdam,
and Department of Cardiology and Cardiovascular Surgery, University Hospital, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Calibration of pH, pco2, and po2 electrode systems of modern bloodgas analyzers, designed with one sample cuvet for measurement, is mostly performed separately with buffer solutions and gas mixtures. We describe the development of solutions of known pH, pco2 and po2 for doing such calibrations simultaneously, containing phosphate, bicarbonate, and chloride in glycerolwater mixtures as solvent. A method is suggested for computing the relation between pH and log pCO2 of these solutions in equilibrium with carbon dioxide gas. It is demonstrated that a solution of phosphate (Na2HPO4, KH2PO4, each 25.mmol/liter), bicarbonate (NaHCO3, 30 mmol/ liter), and chloride (NaCI, 30 mmol/ liter) in glycerol-water mixture (3/7 by vol) and equilibrated with CO2 in air (4 vol/100 vol) and CO2 in nitrogen (8 vol/100 vol), respectively, makes possible accurate and simultaneous calibration of the pH, pco2, po2 electrodes of a Corning Model 165 bloodgas analyzer. Similar solutions may also be used for qualitycontrol of bloodgas measurement.
Submitted on December 3, 1974
Accepted on January 22, 1975
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |