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Critical care medicine · Oct 1999
Comparative StudyArtifactual elevation of measured plasma L-lactate concentration in the presence of glycolate.
- T J Morgan, C Clark, and A Clague.
- Division of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Royal Brisbane Hospital, Herston, Queensland, Australia.
- Crit. Care Med. 1999 Oct 1; 27 (10): 2177-9.
ObjectivesTo determine whether glycolate, a toxic metabolite of ethylene glycol that is chemically similar to lactate, can cause artifactual elevation of measured L-lactate concentrations.DesignProspective in vitro study.SettingIntensive care unit and chemical pathology laboratory in a university-affiliated hospital.SubjectsHeparinized normal human blood and four commercially available L-lactate analyzers.InterventionsFour analyzers were tested, three of which used L-lactate oxidase and one of which used L-lactate dehydrogenase. Glycolic acid (10 g/L) in saline was added to blood in a series of aliquots. Corresponding plasma L-lactate concentrations and blood pH, PCO2, and hemoglobin concentrations were measured and base excess was calculated initially and after the addition of each aliquot. One of the two L-lactate oxidase-type analyzers, which was found to show interference, was then used to measure plasma L-lactate and glucose concentrations in blood with glycolic, oxalic, or formic acid added until the base excess was reduced by >15 mmol/L.Measurements And Main ResultsArtifactual plasma L-lactate elevations were observed in two analyzers, both of the L-lactate oxidase type. Small concentrations of glycolic acid (causing reductions of base excess of 2-5 mmol/L) were accompanied by artifactual plasma L-lactate elevations of 4-8 mmol/L. Artifactual plasma L-lactate elevations increased with further glycolic acid-induced reductions in base excess. Oxalate and formate did not interfere with plasma L-lactate measurements, and measured plasma glucose concentrations were unaffected by all three acids.ConclusionsGlycolate causes large artifactual elevations in plasma L-lactate measurements by two analyzers in common use, with potential for misdiagnosis of lactic acidosis in ethylene glycol poisoning. A possible cause of the interference is incomplete specificity of the analytical reagent L-lactate oxidase, allowing cross-reaction with glycolate.
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