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Evaluation of a miniaturized thermal biosensor for the determination of glucose in whole blood

Harborn, Ulrika ; Xie, Bin LU ; Venkatesh, Raghavan and Danielsson, Bengt LU (1997) In Clinica Chimica Acta 267(2). p.225-237
Abstract

A miniaturized thermal biosensor has been evaluated as part of a flow-injection analysis system for the determination of glucose in whole blood. Glucose was determined by measuring the heat evolved when samples containing glucose passed through a small column with immobilized glucose oxidase and catalase. Samples of whole blood (1 μl) can be measured directly, without any pretreatment. The correlation in the response between the thermal biosensor, the Reflolux S meter (Boehringer Mannheim), the Granutest 100 glucose test kit (Merck Diagnostica) and the Ektachem (Kodak) instrument was evaluated. The influence of the hematocrit value and of possible interferences is reported. The correlation measurements show that the thermal biosensor... (More)

A miniaturized thermal biosensor has been evaluated as part of a flow-injection analysis system for the determination of glucose in whole blood. Glucose was determined by measuring the heat evolved when samples containing glucose passed through a small column with immobilized glucose oxidase and catalase. Samples of whole blood (1 μl) can be measured directly, without any pretreatment. The correlation in the response between the thermal biosensor, the Reflolux S meter (Boehringer Mannheim), the Granutest 100 glucose test kit (Merck Diagnostica) and the Ektachem (Kodak) instrument was evaluated. The influence of the hematocrit value and of possible interferences is reported. The correlation measurements show that the thermal biosensor calibrated with aqueous glucose standards generally gives lower values on blood glucose than the reference methods calibrated for serum or blood measurements. Mean negative biases range from 0.53 to 1.16 mmol/l. Differences in sample treatment clearly complicate comparisons and the proper choice of reference method. There was no influence from substances such as ascorbic acid (0.11 mmol/l), uric acid (0.48 mmol/l), urea (4.3 mmol/l) and acetaminophen (0.17 mmol/l) on the response to 5 mmol/l glucose. The hematocrit value does not influence the glucose determination, for hematocrit values of between 13 and 53%.

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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Biosensor, Calibration aspects, Calorimetric, Diabetes, Enzyme thermistor, Flow injection analysis, Glucose oxidase, Thermal
in
Clinica Chimica Acta
volume
267
issue
2
pages
13 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • pmid:9469255
  • scopus:0031589688
ISSN
0009-8981
DOI
10.1016/S0009-8981(97)00151-4
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
408e743d-f888-4f32-b8b0-c0106ede51cf
date added to LUP
2021-10-27 13:22:41
date last changed
2024-01-20 16:10:44
@article{408e743d-f888-4f32-b8b0-c0106ede51cf,
  abstract     = {{<p>A miniaturized thermal biosensor has been evaluated as part of a flow-injection analysis system for the determination of glucose in whole blood. Glucose was determined by measuring the heat evolved when samples containing glucose passed through a small column with immobilized glucose oxidase and catalase. Samples of whole blood (1 μl) can be measured directly, without any pretreatment. The correlation in the response between the thermal biosensor, the Reflolux S meter (Boehringer Mannheim), the Granutest 100 glucose test kit (Merck Diagnostica) and the Ektachem (Kodak) instrument was evaluated. The influence of the hematocrit value and of possible interferences is reported. The correlation measurements show that the thermal biosensor calibrated with aqueous glucose standards generally gives lower values on blood glucose than the reference methods calibrated for serum or blood measurements. Mean negative biases range from 0.53 to 1.16 mmol/l. Differences in sample treatment clearly complicate comparisons and the proper choice of reference method. There was no influence from substances such as ascorbic acid (0.11 mmol/l), uric acid (0.48 mmol/l), urea (4.3 mmol/l) and acetaminophen (0.17 mmol/l) on the response to 5 mmol/l glucose. The hematocrit value does not influence the glucose determination, for hematocrit values of between 13 and 53%.</p>}},
  author       = {{Harborn, Ulrika and Xie, Bin and Venkatesh, Raghavan and Danielsson, Bengt}},
  issn         = {{0009-8981}},
  keywords     = {{Biosensor; Calibration aspects; Calorimetric; Diabetes; Enzyme thermistor; Flow injection analysis; Glucose oxidase; Thermal}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{11}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{225--237}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Clinica Chimica Acta}},
  title        = {{Evaluation of a miniaturized thermal biosensor for the determination of glucose in whole blood}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0009-8981(97)00151-4}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/S0009-8981(97)00151-4}},
  volume       = {{267}},
  year         = {{1997}},
}