Clinical Chemistry
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Clinical Chemistry 40: 2282-2287, 1994;
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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 40, 2282-2287, Copyright © 1994 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry

Urea and lactate determined in 1-microL whole-blood samples with a miniaturized thermal biosensor

B Xie, U Harborn, M Mecklenburg and B Danielsson
Lund University, Sweden.

A miniaturized flow-injected thermal biosensor was developed for the determination of urea and L-lactate in undiluted blood in 1-microL samples. The sensor employed a small enzyme column constructed of stainless steel tubing and microbead thermistors. Urease and lactate oxidase/catalase were separately immobilized onto controlled-pore glass beads, which, in turn, were charged into the enzyme column. With a flow rate of 70 microL/min, linear analytical ranges from 0.2 to at least 50 mmol/L and 0.2 to 14 mmol/L were obtained for urea and lactate, respectively. The relative standard deviations (CVs) for measurements of analyte in buffer were 0.91% for urea and 1.84% for lactate. For urea in whole blood, the CV for 50 determinations was 4.1%. Contrived samples containing various concentrations of urea and L-lactate in whole blood were determined with this sensor and with a spectrophotometric method. Comparisons of the results gave correlation coefficients of 0.989 and 0.984 for 30 blood urea and 30 blood lactate assays in concentrations ranging from 4 to 20.9 mmol/L and from 1.7 to 12.7 mmol/L, respectively.





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Copyright © 1994 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry.