Abstract

As a preliminary step in a study of the effects of calcium ligands on the pH standardisation of ionised calcium (Ca2+) measurement in blood, the change in Ca2+ induced by Pco2 variation was investigated in 12 serum pools on three different instruments. This type of study should yield a log Ca2+ = f(pH) linear relationship in a pH range around pH 7.40 with a slope characterising the pH-sensitive calcium buffer capacity of the specimen. The pH 7.40 correction line should be horizontal. This was the case for an ICA2 analyser but not for an ICA1 or a Nova 8 analyser. The difference was due to an incorrect setting of the built-in slope correction factor in the ICA2: fortuitously its value was close to the effective slopes of the serum pools used for the test. Thus the anomalous behaviour of the ICA1 and the Nova 8 was due to a discrepancy between the standard built-in algorithm and the characteristics of our serum pools. These findings led us to question the use of a constant correction factor to normalise actual ionised calcium values.

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