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The document discusses clinical chemistry including basic principles, possible cell malfunctions, the role of clinical chemistry laboratories, units of measure, reagents, reference materials, water purity, solution properties, and concentration. It provides details on analytic procedures, chemicals, types of reagent grade water, water specifications, and balances used in clinical chemistry laboratories.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
8 views

Week 1

The document discusses clinical chemistry including basic principles, possible cell malfunctions, the role of clinical chemistry laboratories, units of measure, reagents, reference materials, water purity, solution properties, and concentration. It provides details on analytic procedures, chemicals, types of reagent grade water, water specifications, and balances used in clinical chemistry laboratories.

Uploaded by

chayiezen0301
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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CLINICAL CHEMISTRY 1

Source: Book,PPT,Discussion

Basic Principle and Practice of Clinical Chemistry

Clinical Chemistry
- Basic science
- Chemistry to study humans
- Applied science analyze body fluids.

Possible Cell Malfunctions:


- Trauma by invasive agents
- Genetic deficiency
- Defect in the cellular recognition of signals
- Insufficient supply of blood nutrients and oxygen
- Malignancy
SI Conversions
Clinical Chemistry Laboratory  To convert between SI Units: move decimal point
 Perform analytic procedures; yield accurate and by the difference between exponents represented
precise information. byu the prefix either to the right (larger to smaller
 Aids in patient diagnosis. unit) to the left (larger to smaller)
 Role:
 Measure chemical changes for diagnosis, Reagents
therapy and prognosis.  Substance or compound facilitate a reaction.
 Measure concentration of analytes.  Ready- to- use form or “kit” are available.
 Detect the presence or absence
Units of Measure
 Components of quantitative laboratory result. Chemicals
 Analytic Chemicals
Unit
 Define the physical quantity or dimension. Grades of Purity (Inorganic)
 Should always be reported.  Analytic Reagent- known to be high
SI Unit standard of purity; suitable for use in
 Widely and commonly used. most analytic lab procedures.
 Preferred in scientific literatures and clinical  Ultrapure Chemicals- been put
laboratories. through several purification steps to
 Uses standard prefixes. use in those procedures that require
 Sub- classifications: extremely pure chemicals.
 Basic unit: length (meter), mass  Chemically pure or pure grade-
(kilogram), quantity of substance impurity limitation is not stated; usage
(mole) and preparation of this reagent is not
 Derived units: ex. meters per second recommended for lab use.
(m/s)  USP and NF- as long as they are not
injurious to human. Ex. Saline
 Technical grade- less pure that
reagent grade.
 Commercial grade- prepared in
volume for general use.
Organic Reagents
 Practical grade with some impurities.
 CP- approaches the purity level or
reagent grade chemicals.
 Spectroscopic and chromatographic
grade- purity level attained by their
respective procedures
 Reagent Grade (ACS)- certified to
contain impurities.

Reference Materials
 Required for an accurate calibration.

MA. PATRICIA VILLANUEVA 1


CLINICAL CHEMISTRY 1
Source: Book,PPT,Discussion
 Primary Standard: highly purified chemicals; can Distilled Water Been purified to remove
be measured directly; produce substance of exact almost all organic
known concentration and purity. materials
 Secondary Standard: Deionized Water Some or all ions are
removed; neither pure
Reagent Grade Water nor sterile; purified from
 Most frequent reagent used in laboratory. previously treated water
 water that has been processed.
Six Categories: Water Purity
 CLRW- should be stored in manner that  Water free from all bacteria and viruses
reduces any chemical or bacterial Resistance
contamination.  Force on objects floating on or moving water.
 Special reagent water Measured because pure water, devoid of ions, is a
 Instrument feed water poor conductor of electricity and has increased
 Water supplied by manufacturer resistance.
 Autoclave and wash water
 Commercially bottled purified water Production of reagent grade water largely
Type of Reagent Grade Water depends on the condition of the feed water.
Type I Most stringent; generally Relationship of water purity and resistance is
suitable for routine lab LINEAR.
use; test method that
requires minimum Solution Properties
interference.
Type II Acceptable for most Solute- analytes; being dissolved
analytic requirements. Solvent- liquid in which the solute is being dissolved
Type III Glassware washing; not
for analysis Solution- solvent + solute
 Basic properties: concentration, saturation,
colligative properties, redox potential, conductivity,
Water Specifications density, pH, and ionic strength.
Pre-filtration Remove particulate
Concentration
matter before any
additional treatments.
Analyte
Ultrafiltration and Excellent in removing
 Concentration in solution. Can be expressed as
Nano-filtration particulate matter,
percent solution, molarity, molality, normality.
microorganisms, and
any pyrogens and
Percent Weight/ Weight
endotoxins.
Solution
Two-bed system Uses anion resin
 Expressed
followed by cation resin;
as the
excellent in removing
amount of
dissolved ionized solids
solute per
and dissolved gases.
100 total Volume/Volume
Reverse osmosis Uses pressure to force
units of
water to a
solution.
semipermeable
membrane; does not
remove dissolved gases.
Ultraviolet oxidation Removes some trace Weight/Volume
organic material or
sterilization process;
ozone treatment +
ultraviolet oxidation=
destroy bacteria, but
may leave behind
residual products.

MA. PATRICIA VILLANUEVA 2


CLINICAL CHEMISTRY 1
Source: Book,PPT,Discussion
Molarity (M) Balances  Top-loading-
 Expressed knowing mass, used
as the for preparative
number of experiments
moles per  Analytical Balance-
1L of preparation of
solution. primary standards;
very small quantity
Molality (m)
 Represent Basic Separation Technique
s the
amount of Centrifiguration
solute per - Separate solid matter from liquid suspension.
1kg of - Consist of:
solvent.  Head/Rotor (swinging bucket or V angle)
Normality  Shield
 Least  Speed: RPM, RCF or gravities.
likely to Filtrations
use in - Uses paper, cellulose, polyester fibers and column
clinical materials.
laboratory;
often used
in
titrations.
Always
equal to or
greater
than the
molarity of
the
compound

Clinical Laboratory Supplies


Thermometer Liquid in Glass
 Total Immersion
 Partial Immersion
 Surface
Thermometer
 Electronic
Thermometer
 Digital Thermometer
Glassware  Borosilicate
 Aluminosilicate
 Acid/Alkali resistant
Laboratory Vessel  Volumetric Flask-
hold one exact
volume
 Erlenmeyer Flask
and Beaker- hold
different volume.
Never use to
measure water.
 Graduated Cylinder-
measure liquid.
Pipets
Burets
Syringes
Plastic ware
Desiccator and Take up water or
Desiccants moisture.

MA. PATRICIA VILLANUEVA 3

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