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Basic Principles and Practice of Clinical Chemistry, Part 2

This document discusses reagents, controls, standards, water quality, and laboratory equipment used in clinical chemistry. It defines terms like analytical grade, primary standards, secondary standards, controls, and calibrators. It describes different types of glass, plastic, and pipettes used as labware and their appropriate uses. Proper cleaning, use, and storage of glassware is also covered.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
101 views

Basic Principles and Practice of Clinical Chemistry, Part 2

This document discusses reagents, controls, standards, water quality, and laboratory equipment used in clinical chemistry. It defines terms like analytical grade, primary standards, secondary standards, controls, and calibrators. It describes different types of glass, plastic, and pipettes used as labware and their appropriate uses. Proper cleaning, use, and storage of glassware is also covered.

Uploaded by

santosh_dhande
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 46

Chapter 1

Basic Principles and Practice of Clinical


Chemistry, part 2

1
 C. REAGENTS; Chemical Grades

 Reagent preparation in the clinical lab is decreasing -


most reagents are obtained from commercial
manufacturers
 Objective: Identify and differentiate the different degrees of chemical
purity.

 Common terms that relate to reagent purity:

 Analytical Grade (purest), also called reagent grade or


ACS grades - best choice for lab work.
 National Formulary (NF) or US Pharmacopeia (USP) –
used for drugs, may be OK for lab work
 Chemical Pure (least pure) – not recommended for lab
 Technical or commercial grade – never for lab use

2
 REAGENTS; Chemical Grades

 Primary Standard : Highly purified solution of known


concentration. These standards are used in the clinical
lab to “calibrate” / “standardize” instruments in order to
measure other solutions of unknown concentration
 Primary Standards must be 99.98% pure
 Secondary Standard : Less pure substance whose
concentration was determined by comparison to a
Primary Standard
 Standard Reference Material / Calibrator
 The name for biological substances used as
‘standards’
 Most biological standards cannot be 99.98%
pure because the chemical processes to
achieve this level of purity would destroy the
substances.

3
 Controls
 For our purposes:
 Defined: substance, whose physical and
chemical properties resemble the unknown
specimen …
 A control should have the same appearance
and consistency as does the patient samples:
 If patient sample is ‘serum’; the control should look
like and have the same consistency as serum.
 If the patient sample is ‘urine’, the control is urine,
etc.
 - Controls are used to verify the accuracy
and acceptability of a run.

4
 Control Solutions vs. Standard Solutions

 A Control specimen is used to monitor Quality


Control (QC)
 A Control has known acceptable ranges, established
either by the manufacturer (assayed) or the hospital
lab itself (un-assayed)
 It is usually a serum/plasma based solution that is
treated just as if it were a patient specimen
 Control specimens must produce results within
established ranges in order for the ‘run’ to be
acceptable.

5
 Control Solutions vs. Standard Solutions

 A Standard solution is a highly purified solution that


is usually not serum / plasma based

 Standard solutions have set, listed values that are


established by the manufacturer

 Standard solutions are used to “calibrate”


instruments, that is to “set” instruments to measure
correctly at known concentration

6
 Control Solutions vs. Standard Solutions

 Standard solutions are also called “ Calibrators” – if


they are biological in nature
 Consider for example, analytes such as bilirubin.

 These substances do not come in the ‘highly purified


state, as calcium, glucose, etc.

 A bilirubin standard is biological based, and technically


a calibrator rather than the purely defined standard.

 What about the ‘hematology standards’? Standard or


calibrator?

7
 Water Specifications

 Tap water is unsuitable for lab use (too many impurities)

 Types of water purification techniques

 Distillation – removes most organic matter


 Reverse osmosis
 Filtration
 Deionization – ions removed

 Reagent Grades of water

 Type I Purest – Required for sensitive tests


 Type II Acceptable for most uses
 Type III OK for washing glassware

 CAP - QC of water : pH, electrical resistance, bacterial


culture

8
Water filtration system for
Automated chemistry analyzer.

9
 Use of Blanks
 Review: Blanks used to eliminate or subtract the effects of
reagent or specimen colors that would interfere with
accurately measuring an analyte.

 Water Blank – DI water, used to ‘zero’ the


spectrophotometer. Seen mostly in UV procedures.

 Reagent Blank – contains all the reagents used in the ‘tests’.


DI water sometimes used in the place of the amount of
patient specimen. Colorimetric procedures.

 Patient Blank – required by some procedures if patient


sample has deep color that would affect results. Name 3
situations that would warrant use of ‘patient blank’.

10
 Labware
 Types of glass
 High thermal borosilicate
 Can take long periods of high temperatures
 Scratches easily
 Acceptable for chemistry work
 Examples: Pyrex, Kimax

11
 Labware
 Types of glass
 Aluminosilicate
 Can withstand heat as long as not in contact with
acids or alkalis
 Resists scratching
 Acceptable for chemistry work
 Examples: centrifuge tubes, thermometers

12
 Labware
 Types of glass
 Soda lime – not suitable for lab use

13
 Types of plastic resins
 Polystyrene
 Clear, rigid
 Can withstand temperatures to 70 C
 Examples: many disposables

14
 Types of plastic resins
Polyethylene
 Translucent in appearance
 Two types
 One type can withstand temperatures up to 80 C,
and is flexible, i.e., reagent wash bottles
 Other can withstand temperatures up to 120 C and
is rigid, i.e., droppers

15
 Types of plastic resins
 Polyvinyl chloride
 Translucent in appearance, but rigid
 Withstands temperatures to 135 C
 Examples: screw cap enclosures

16
 Types of glassware
 Beakers
 Flasks
 Volumetric
 Erlenmeyer
 Graduated cylinders
 Reagent bottles
 Test tubes

17
 Pipets
 Types
 Volumetric –
 Volumetric pipets are TD, the most accurate and used to prepare
Standard solutions, Calibrators and Quality Control specimens
 Ostwald-Folin
 Capillary
 Serologic
 TD = to deliver
 TC = to contain
 Mohr
 Transfer
 Automatic and
semi-automatic

18
 Laboratory Vessels and Pipets
 Volumetric flasks : The line indicates the level that contains an exact volume
 Erlenmeyer flasks : Hold variable volumes
 Graduated cylinders : Hold variable volumes

 Pipet rules
 TC = needs to be blown out
 TD = let drain along the side of the receiving vessel
 Read pipets from the bottom of the meniscus
 Hold pipets straight up and down
 Use suction bulbs to aspirate fluids into pipets
 NEVER MOUTH PIPET !!!
 Place dirty pipets in soapy water with tips up

19
 Proper use
 Use correct pipet for the job
 Examine the pipet before use for cleanliness, chips,
etc.
 NEVER pipet by mouth
 Draw the solution slightly above the mark
 Wipe the tip with a Kimwipe

Correct and incorrect pipet


positions

20
 Buret – essentially an elaborate pipet
mounted on a stand used in titration
procedures

21
 Cleaning of Lab Glassware
 Majority of time can simply presoak, dishwash, and
thoroughly rinse with tap and finally
distilled/deionized water

 Chemically clean glassware is required for certain


chemistry procedures (enzymes, iron, heavy metals,
etc.)
 ‘dichromate acid’ or ‘acid dichromate’

22
 General Laboratory Equipment
 Balances – type chosen dependent on
volume/weight needed and degree of accuracy
required.

 What is the best choice for clinical work?

23
 General Laboratory Equipment
 Centrifuge
 Purpose
 Types
 Characteristics
 Fixed rotor head / swinging bucket
 Closing – locked closed lid now required

24
 General Laboratory Equipment
 Other methods of separating materials
 Filtration of materials
 Dialysis - a method made popular by Technicon
Corporation (early manufacturer of automated lab
equipment). This method makes use of a semi-
permeable membrane that allows separation of
molecules using their size

25
 Specimen Collection and Processing
 Medical ethics in specimen collection –
professionalism and confidentiality at all
times
 Special collection procedures
 Fasting specimens: overnight for most tests, 12 hours
for lipid studies
 Timed interval specimens
 Examples include glucose tolerance, therapeutic
drug monitoring, and hormone stimulation testing
 In some cases urine collection also required
 Legal chain of evidence
 Other special collection procedures

26
 Specimen processing
 Determining specimen acceptability
 Other than improper timing, identify things that can
affect chemical analysis of clinical specimens.

 Specimen accessioning

27
 Specimen processing
 Serum separators – covered in summer course
 Gel barrier
 Beads, crystals or fibers
 Plastic tube device

28
 Other / SPECIMEN CONSIDERATIONS

 Specimen collection and processing are critical


 A poor specimen = poor specimen results
 Most lab errors are pre-analytical !!!

 Common sources of error

 Contamination with IV fluids


 Hemolysis of RBCs contaminates plasma and
serum
 Labeling errors
 Collection with improper anticoagulants and
preservatives
 Analyzers clogged by clotted specimens

29
 The slides that follow are from another
information source and remain here only
for general use, at this time.

30
 Collection tubes / Additives
 Red None
 Red / Black None – Gel separator
 Lavender EDTA anticoagulant
 Orange Thrombin promotes clotting
 Blue Sodium citrate anticoagulant
 Gray Sodium fluoride / Potassium oxalate
 Green Heparin anticoagulant

 Collection order ( to avoid contamination / interference )


 1 Sterile specimens – Blood Cultures (yellow)
 2 Blue
 3 Gold / Red / Orange
 4 Green
 5 Lavender
 6 Gray

31
 Colligative Properties

 Properties of solutions that are based only on the numbers of particles


that are dissolved in the solvent

 It doesn’t matter what the particles are or how big they are

 Examples of colligative properties

Freezing Point
Boiling Point
Vapor Pressure
Osmotic Pressure

32
 Redox Potential ( Oxidation-Reduction Potential)

 If a substance Loses Electrons , it is Oxidized (LEO)


 It may also be called a Reducing Agent ( donates
electrons)

 If a substance Gains Electrons , it is Reduced (GER)


 It may also be called a Oxidizing Agent ( accepts
electrons)

 Remember … The lion ( LEO ) says “gerr” ( GER )

 Conductivity: Measure of electrical current


 Resistance: Measure of resistance to current

33
1
 pH and Buffers H

 Buffers resist change in acidity


 Buffers are usually weak acids ( or bases) and their salts

 pH is the unit used to measure acidity ( Hydrogen ion


concentration )
 “p” = “negative log” of the concentration of a substance in
solution.
 Example: pH = - log [H+]

 The Hydrogen ion concentration of deionized H2O is 1 x 10-7 M


 The negative log of 10-7 = 7. The pH of H2O is 7.0

 The pH scale ranges from 0 - 14


 pH 7 = neutral
 pH > 7 = alkaline (basic)
 pH < 7 = acid

34
Significant Figures Rules
 All non-zero’s are significant
 All zeros between non-zero numbers are significant
 Zero’s to the right of a number with a decimal place are significant

 Zeros to the right of a number without a decimal place are not significant
 Zeros to the left of a number with a decimal place are not significant

 Examples of significant figures

 9004 4
 101 3
 6.2 2
 207.0 4
 679.01 5
 700 1
 24300 3
 0.0100 3
 0.0004 1

35
 Conversions

 You must remember this, conversions do NOT


change the value of the concentration …
Conversions only change the UNITS the value
is being expressed in.

 Whatever we are converting is just as big or


small as before we did the conversion.

36
Rules for Multiplication and Division of Significant Figures

 Perform the multiplication and division as written

 Round off your final answer to the least number of significant figures that
occurs in the original figures

 Example

0.02112.5313.82  0.000614794
1200

The figure with the least number of significant figures is 1200 ( it has 2 ).
Your answer can’t have more significant figures than the “weakest link in the chain”
The answer must also be rounded off to 2 significant figures … 0.00061

37
 Example of a conversion

 How many mls are there in 2.5 liters? ( this is an easy one )

The question you have to ask yourself is, what is the relationship between
liters and mls? The answer : 1 liter = 1000 ml … This is a true statement …
But now what?

We want to get rid of the “liters’ units and end up with “mls” … Right ?
So all you need to do is put in a truthful mathematical statement that gets rid
of the stuff you want to lose and adds the stuff you want to pick up … So
 1000 mls 
2.5 Liter    2500 mls
 1 Liter 

THIS IS THE SECRET !!!


The fraction I created equals 1.0 … It doesn’t change the value!
I wrote it with the Liter on the bottom so it would cancel out the Liter on the top …
and I also picked up the mls I need . All conversions use this strategy
38
1.25 liters = _____ mls ? Remember, write a fraction that does two things:

1. Equals 1
2. Gets rid of unwanted units and / or adds needed units

 1000 mls 
125
. Liters 
 1 Liter 
  1250 mls

100 mg = _________ ug ?

 1000 ug 
100 mg  1 mg   10,0000 ug
39
 Another conversion example

 “Physiological Saline” is used in Blood Banks and Hematology to prepare


Red Blood Cell suspensions.
 Physiological Saline is usually listed as being 0.9 % NaCl
 0.9 grams of NaCl is added to 100 mls deionized water to make physiological
saline
 What is the Normality (N) of physiological saline?

 0.9 grams NaCl   1 EqWt NaCl   1000 mls 


     015
. N
 100 mls water   58 grams   1 Liter 

Unwanted units cancel out


leaving EqWt / Liter = N Fraction = 1 Fraction = 1

Conversions are manipulations of the units – not the values !!!

40
 Dilutions

 A dilution is a numerical ratio of the original material to


the final volume ( after the addition of a diluent )

 Dilutions of serum or plasma are required when the


concentration of a chemical substance being measured
exceeds the linearity of the test methodology

 Example

 A plasma glucose concentration exceeds the analyzer’s


ability to accurately measure it. The automated analyzer is
programmed to dilute the specimen 1:2.

 The concentration of the diluted specimen must be


multiplied by 2 , the dilution factor ( the reciprocal of the
dilution ) to correct for the dilution of the specimen.

41
Examples of dilutions and dilution factors

Parts Parts Total Dilution Dilution


Specimen Diluent Volume Factor

1.0 1.0 2.0 1:2 2

1.0 2.0 3.0 1:3 3

1.0 3.0 4.0 1:4 4

1.0 9.0 10.0 1 : 10 10

0.5 4.5 5.0 1 : 10 10

0.2 1.8 2.0 1 : 10 10

0.2 9.8 10.0 1 : 50 50

42
Making Dilutions of Concentrated Acids or Bases

It’s common to make dilutions of concentrated solutions to prepare new solutions of


lower concentrations. Remember this formula:

C1V1 = C2V2 C = Concentration of solution ( M or N )


V = Volume of solution

How many mls of 1.0 N HCl is required to prepare 25 mls of 0.5 N HCl ?

( 1.0 N ) ( ? mls ) = ( 0.5 N ) ( 25 mls )

? mls = 12.5 mls

You would need to add 12.5 mls of 1.0 N HCl to 12.5 mls of deionized
water ( a total volume of 25 mls ) to prepare 25 mls of 0.5 N HCl

43
TOP 10

 Know those prefixes !!!

Molarity = Moles / Liter

Molality = Moles / 1000 grams solvent

 Normality = Eq Wt / Liter

 Per Cent Solutions = parts / 100 …


( Be careful if your dealing with liquids and solid materials )

 Do some simple conversions

 TD pipet ( don’t blow out ) … TC ( blow out )

 Buffers resist changes in pH ( p = - log )

 A dilution is a ratio of original material to the final total volume

 “The lion says gerr”

44
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