Background: In a whole blood coagulation test, the concentration of any in vitro diagnostic agent in plasma is dependent on the hematocrit level but its impact on the test result is unknown.
Objective: The aim of this work was to clarify the effects of reagent concentration, particularly Ca2+, and to find a method for hematocrit estimation compatible with the coagulation test.
Methods: Whole blood coagulation tests by dielectric blood coagulometry (DBCM) and rotational thromboelastometry were performed with various concentrations of Ca2+ or on samples with different hematocrit levels.
We present dielectric coagulometry as a new technique to estimate the risk of venous thrombosis by measuring the permittivity change associated with the blood coagulation process. The method was first tested for a simple system of animal erythrocytes suspended in fibrinogen solution, where the coagulation rate was controlled by changing the amount of thrombin added to the suspension. Second, the method was applied to a more realistic system of human whole blood, and the inherent coagulation process was monitored without artificial acceleration by a coagulation initiator.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA comparative study of centrifugation and conductance methods for the estimation of cell volume fraction (phi) was performed to examine whether the strong forces exerted upon erythrocytes during centrifugation affect their volume, and the results are discussed in terms of erythrocyte deformability. Rabbit erythrocytes of four shapes (spherocytes, echinocytes, stomatocyte-like enlarged erythrocytes and discocytes) were prepared by controlling the pH of the suspending media. The packed cell volumes of the suspensions were measured by standard hematocrit determination methods using centrifugation in capillary tubes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have developed what we believe is an efficient method to determine the electric parameters (the specific membrane capacitance C(m) and the cytoplasm conductivity kappa(i)) of cells from their dielectric dispersion. First, a limited number of dispersion curves are numerically calculated for a three-dimensional cell model by changing C(m) and kappa(i), and their amplitudes Deltaepsilon and relaxation times tau are determined by assuming a Cole-Cole function. Second, regression formulas are obtained from the values of Deltaepsilon and tau and then used for the determination of C(m) and kappa(i) from the experimental Deltaepsilon and tau.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe performed a systematic study of the sensitivity of dielectric spectroscopy to erythrocyte morphology. Namely, rabbit erythrocytes of four different shapes were prepared by precisely controlling the pH of the suspending medium, and their complex permittivities over the frequency range from 0.1 to 110 MHz were measured and analyzed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRabbit blood was preserved at 277 K in Alsever's solution for 37 days, and its dielectric permittivity was monitored in a frequency range from 0.05 to 110 MHz throughout the period. The relaxation time and Cole-Cole parameter of the interfacial polarization process for erythrocytes remained nearly constant during the first 20 days and then started to increase and decrease, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe performed dielectric spectroscopy measurements on aqueous solutions of glycine betaine (N,N,N-trimethylglycine), which is known to be a strong stabilizer of globular proteins, over a wide concentration range (3-62 wt %) and compared the results with our previously published data for aqueous solutions of urea, a representative protein denaturant. The hydration number of betaine (9), calculated on the basis of the reduction in the dielectric relaxation strength of bulk water with addition of betaine, is significantly larger than that of urea (2). Furthermore, the dielectric relaxation time increased with betaine concentration, while that remained nearly constant for the urea-water system over a wide concentration range.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
January 2007
Dielectric spectroscopy measurements were performed for aqueous solutions of short single-stranded DNA with 30 to 120 bases of thymine over a frequency range of 10;{5} to 10;{8}Hz . Dielectric dispersion was found to include two relaxation processes in the ranges from 10;{5} to 10;{6} and from 10;{6} to 10;{8}Hz , respectively, with the latter mainly discussed in this study. The dielectric increment and the relaxation time of the high-frequency relaxation of DNA in solutions without added salt exhibited concentration and polymer-length dependences eventually identical to those for dilute polyion solutions described in previous studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDielectric spectroscopy measurements for aqueous urea solutions were performed at 298 K through a concentration range from 0.5 to 9.0 M with frequencies between 200 MHz and 40 GHz.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA complex dielectric constant for double-strand DNA molecules with a length of not greater than 120 base pairs in an aqueous solution containing 30 mM NaCl was systematically measured as a function of chain length in such a way that experimental uncertainties associated with the molecular-weight distribution of specimens were virtually excluded. In contrast to the past experimental and theoretical studies for much longer DNA molecules, both the molar specific dielectric increment and the relaxation time are proportional to the chain length. These scaling rules cannot be accounted for by any theory so far proposed that gives analytical expressions for those two quantities in the long-chain limit.
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