1. The effect of the partial pressure of oxygen on blood glucose concentration examined using glucose oxidase with ferricyan ion
- Author
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Tae-Yool Chun, Yoshifumi Tanaka, Masao Miyazaki, Munetaka Hirose, Masato Harada, Toyoshi Hosokawa, and Teiji Sawa
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Partial Pressure ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Biosensing Techniques ,Oxygen ,Ion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Glucose Oxidase ,Anesthesiology ,Internal medicine ,Hexokinase ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Glucose oxidase ,False Negative Reactions ,biology ,business.industry ,Partial pressure ,humanities ,Intensive Care Units ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Breathing ,biology.protein ,Arterial blood ,business - Abstract
Glucose oxidase with ferricyan ion (GOD-F) is widely applied in clinical settings as a glucose sensor. However, blood oxygen concentration affects this blood glucose value because oxygen, at increased concentrations, consumes blood glucose, which cannot then be measured by this sensor. We investigated the effect of PO2 on blood glucose concentration in 48 patients who were breathing high concentrations of oxygen. Arterial and pulmonary arterial blood glucose values were analyzed using the GOD-F method and, as a control, the hexokinase method. The respective PO2 values were also measured. The blood glucose concentrations measured by the GOD-F method show a significant linear relation with that measured by the hexokinase method in both arterial (y = -24.4 + 1.01x, r = 0.99) and pulmonary arterial blood (y = -3.4 + 1.01x, r = 0.96). The difference of intercepts is statistically significant, but because of the relatively large limits of agreement indicating any hidden extraneous variabilities, the error of the GOD-F method could not be assessed just by the difference. The equation defining the effect of PO2 on the percent change between blood glucose measured by the GOD-F method and that measured by the hexokinase method is -19.8/(1 + 203900/PO2(2.68) (r = 0.62). This formula generally follows our measured materials and introduces the relationship among blood glucose value, PO2, and the error of the GOD-F method. We hesitate to suggest that the arterial blood glucose concentration when measured by the GOD-F method could be underestimated by as much as 20% in patients with high arterial oxygen pressure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1994