Title of article :
In vivo glucose monitoring with open microflow – influences of fluid composition and preliminary evaluation in man Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
G.P Rigby، نويسنده , , S Ahmed، نويسنده , , G Horseman، نويسنده , , P Vadgama، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Abstract :
Reliable measurement of glucose in the subcutaneous tissue compartment has been shown to be possible in rats using a miniaturised bipolar enzyme electrode integrated with a unique open microflow strategy in which the sensor surface is subjected to slow, continuous fluid perfusion. Experiments using such a slow, tissue controlled and pumpless perfusion of the implanted needle electrode surface (at a rate of 30 μl/h with chelate containing buffer (EDTA) has been shown to eliminate systematic bias in blood:tissue correlation even under dynamic conditions. Replacement with simple isotonic saline, however, has proved deleterious to sensor performance and reliability yielding a blood/tissue correlation y=0.66x+2.4, r2=0.73 (five electrodes). The addition of the vasoconstrictor epinephrine into the saline based perfusion fluid, above a threshold value (0.25 mM), led to a delayed tissue glucose response and further reduced the dynamic correlation with blood (y=0.31x+4.31, r2=0.22, two electrodes). Inclusion of hydrocortisone to saline did not return the original buffer correlation (y=0.81x+1.12, r2=0.79, two electrodes).
Preliminary evaluation of open microflow/electrode functionality in non-diabetic human subjects has revealed a contracted stabilisation requirement of 25–35 min, and a reliable correlation with tissue glucose changes with whole blood under dynamic conditions following oral carbohydrate (y=0.92x+0.60, r2=0.97, five electrodes). Reassessment of electrode performance in vitro following a maximal 4 h implantation period demonstrated protected electrode stability with electrode response within 5% of original sensitivity intimating low surface fouling and an eliminated need for repeated in vivo calibration at least over an initial 4 h monitoring period, a highly unstable phase of the operational lifetime of an in vivo electrode.
Keywords :
Glucose , Open microflow , Tissue , Diabetes , Monitoring
Journal title :
Analytica Chimica Acta
Journal title :
Analytica Chimica Acta