Literature DB >> 27226021

Evaluation of Amount of Blood in Dry Blood Spots: Ring-Disk Electrode Conductometry.

Akinde F Kadjo1, Brian N Stamos1, C Phillip Shelor1, Jordan M Berg2, Benjamin C Blount3, Purnendu K Dasgupta1.   

Abstract

A fixed area punch in dried blood spot (DBS) analysis is assumed to contain a fixed amount of blood, but the amount actually depends on a number of factors. The presently preferred approach is to normalize the measurement with respect to the sodium level, measured by atomic spectrometry. Instead of sodium levels, we propose electrical conductivity of the extract as an equivalent nondestructive measure. A dip-type small diameter ring-disk electrode (RDE) is ideal for very small volumes. However, the conductance (G) measured by an RDE depends on the depth (D) of the liquid below the probe. There is no established way of computing the specific conductance (σ) of the solution from G. Using a COMSOL Multiphysics model, we were able to obtain excellent agreement between the measured and the model predicted conductance as a function of D. Using simulations over a large range of dimensions, we provide a spreadsheet-based calculator where the RDE dimensions are the input parameters and the procedure determines the 99% of the infinite depth conductance (G99) and the depth D99 at which this is reached. For typical small diameter probes (outer electrode diameter ∼ <2 mm), D99 is small enough for dip-type measurements in extract volumes of ∼100 μL. We demonstrate the use of such probes with DBS extracts. In a small group of 12 volunteers (age 20-66), the specific conductance of 100 μL aqueous extracts of 2 μL of spotted blood showed a variance of 17.9%. For a given subject, methanol extracts of DBS spots nominally containing 8 and 4 μL of blood differed by a factor of 1.8-1.9 in the chromatographically determined values of sulfate and chloride (a minor and major constituent, respectively). The values normalized with respect to the conductance of the extracts differed by ∼1%. For serum associated analytes, normalization of the analyte value by the extract conductance can thus greatly reduce errors from variations in the spotted blood volume/unit area.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27226021     DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.6b01280

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anal Chem        ISSN: 0003-2700            Impact factor:   6.986


  3 in total

1.  Dried blood spots for the identification of bio-accumulating organic compounds: current challenges and future perspectives.

Authors:  Karl J Jobst; Anmol Arora; Krystal Godri Pollitt; John G Sled
Journal:  Curr Opin Environ Sci Health       Date:  2020-07-14

Review 2.  The Evolving Role of Microsampling in Therapeutic Drug Monitoring of Monoclonal Antibodies in Inflammatory Diseases.

Authors:  Panagiotis-Dimitrios Mingas; Jurij Zdovc; Iztok Grabnar; Tomaž Vovk
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2021-03-22       Impact factor: 4.411

3.  Optimization and Stability Testing of Four Commercially Available Dried Blood Spot Devices for Estimating Measles and Rubella IgG Antibodies.

Authors:  Ojas Kaduskar; Vaishali Bhatt; Christine Prosperi; Kyla Hayford; Alvira Z Hasan; Gururaj Rao Deshpande; Bipin Tilekar; Jeromie Wesley Vivian Thangaraj; Muthusamy Santhosh Kumar; Nivedita Gupta; Manoj V Murhekar; William J Moss; Sanjay M Mehendale; Lucky Sangal; Gajanan Sapkal
Journal:  mSphere       Date:  2021-07-14       Impact factor: 4.389

  3 in total

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