1. Blood Density Is Nearly Equal to Water Density: A Validation Study of the Gravimetric Method of Measuring Intraoperative Blood Loss
- Author
-
Dominic Vitello, Michael R. Fettiplace, Joseph M. Vitello, Guy L. Weinberg, and Richard Ripper
- Subjects
Validation study ,lcsh:Veterinary medicine ,Article Subject ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Chemistry ,Analytical chemistry ,Hematocrit ,Animal science ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,Distilled water ,Blood loss ,Linear regression ,medicine ,lcsh:SF600-1100 ,Gravimetric analysis ,Research Article ,Whole blood - Abstract
Purpose. The gravimetric method of weighing surgical sponges is used to quantify intraoperative blood loss. The dry mass minus the wet mass of the gauze equals the volume of blood lost. This method assumes that the density of blood is equivalent to water (1 gm/mL). This study’s purpose was to validate the assumption that the density of blood is equivalent to water and to correlate density with hematocrit. Methods. 50 µL of whole blood was weighed from eighteen rats. A distilled water control was weighed for each blood sample. The averages of the blood and water were compared utilizing a Student’s unpaired, one-tailed t-test. The masses of the blood samples and the hematocrits were compared using a linear regression. Results. The average mass of the eighteen blood samples was 0.0489 g and that of the distilled water controls was 0.0492 g. The t-test showed P=0.2269 and R2=0.03154. The hematocrit values ranged from 24% to 48%. The linear regression R2 value was 0.1767. Conclusions. The R2 value comparing the blood and distilled water masses suggests high correlation between the two populations. Linear regression showed the hematocrit was not proportional to the mass of the blood. The study confirmed that the measured density of blood is similar to water.
- Published
- 2015