1. Interference by Pralidoxime (PAM) salts in clinical laboratory tests
- Author
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Sumika Nagase, Yoshinori Iwatani, Mikio Watanabe, Kaoru Tohyama, and Katsunori Kohguchi
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,Pralidoxime ,Point-of-Care Systems ,Potassium ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Iodide ,Enzyme electrode ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Pharmacology ,Iodine ,AutoAnalyzer ,Biochemistry ,Chloride ,law.invention ,stomatognathic system ,law ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Diagnostic Errors ,Clark electrode ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Pralidoxime Compounds ,Chromatography ,Clinical Laboratory Techniques ,Blood Glucose Self-Monitoring ,Biochemistry (medical) ,General Medicine ,chemistry ,embryonic structures ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Drugs sometimes alter the results of clinical laboratory tests. We examined the effects of pralidoxime (PAM) salts, a medicine used to treat organophosphorus poisoning, on clinical laboratory test results for the first time. Methods The effects of PAM salts on glucose (GLU) measurements were examined using a point-of-care testing (POCT) meter, four self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) meters, and two biochemical autoanalyzers. The effects of PAM salts on other clinical tests were also evaluated. Results The addition of PAM iodide or potassium iodide, but not of PAM chloride or potassium chloride, to blood samples increased the GLU values measured by one POCT meter and 4 SMBG meters using the enzyme electrode (hydrogen peroxidase or oxygen electrode) method. On the other hand, PAM iodide or PAM chloride, but not KI or KCl, affected the values measured at 340 nm by an autoanalyzer using absorption spectrophotometry in 8 of 14 clinical laboratory tests. The absorption spectrum of PAM changed from 294 to 338 nm due to the reaction between PAM and the alkaline buffer, a component of the measuring reagents. Conclusions PAM iodide increases the GLU values measured by the enzyme electrode method, and PAM salts affected the values measured at 340 nm by absorption spectrophotometry in many other clinical test items.
- Published
- 2013
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