Abstract

Specimens of arterial plasma and venous whole blood were obtained at 3-10 min intervals during the post-peak phase of ethanol metabolism in healthy volunteers. The concentrations of ethanol in blood and plasma were determined by headspace gas chromatography. This method had a standard deviation of 0.28 mg/dl for whole blood and 0.26 mg/dl for plasma and the coefficients of variation were 0.43% and 0.79% respectively. The physiological variation from time-to-time, expressed as the residual standard deviation after fitting the ethanol concentration-time regression relationships, ranged from 0.43-3.7 mg/dl (0.65-16%). The time-to-time variations in concentrations of ethanol were maximum when there were problems in getting an unimpeded flow of blood through the indwelling catheters. The results do not support the existence of sporadic fluctuations or spiking in the blood alcohol concentration-time profile during the post-absorptive state. Instead, this study underscores the need to control carefully the method of sampling blood and in this way keep pre-analytical sources of variation to a minimum.

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