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Interference in Ion-Selective Electrodes Due to Proteins and Lipids

Sudip Kumar Datta, Parul Chopra

2021The Journal of Applied Laboratory Medicine19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ion-selective electrodes (ISE) have become the mainstay of electrolyte measurements in the clinical laboratory. In most automated analyzers used in large diagnostic laboratories, indirect ISE (iISE) -based electrolyte estimation is done; whereas direct ISE (dISE) -based equipment are mostly used in blood gas analyzers and in the point-of-care (PoC) setting. CONTENT: Both the techniques, iISE as well as dISE, are scientifically robust; however, the results are often not interchangeable. Discrepancy happens between the two commonly due to interferences that affect the two measuring principles differently. Over the last decade, several studies have reported discrepancies between dISE and iISE arising due to abnormal protein and lipid contents in the sample. SUMMARY: The present review endeavors to consolidate the knowledge accumulated in relation to interferences due to abnormal protein and lipid contents in sample with the principal focus resting on probable solutions thereof.

Topics & Concepts

ElectrolyteInterference (communication)ElectrodeSample (material)IonSpectrum analyzerPoint of careChemistryComputer scienceMaterials scienceAnalytical Chemistry (journal)NanotechnologyChromatographyMedicineTelecommunicationsPathologyChannel (broadcasting)Physical chemistryOrganic chemistryAnalytical Chemistry and SensorsClinical Laboratory Practices and Quality ControlElectrochemical sensors and biosensors
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