Der Anaesthesist
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Exact and quick measurements of basic laboratory parameters are important in selected patients in the perioperative period. Depending on the capabilities of a hospital's central laboratory, the anaesthesiologist may only obtain such laboratory tests after unacceptable delays. This problem may be overcome by a new bedside measurement device that has become available from i-STAT Corporation, Princeton, USA. The hand-held, battery-driven analyser accepts blood specimens that are injected into a disposable cartridge (EG7+) and measures acidity, blood gas tensions, haematocrit, and electrolytes. The aim of this study was to determine the accuracy of such measurements by comparing them with measurements obtained by conventional laboratory test methods. ⋯ This analyser is easy to use, reliable, and portable, and therefore suitable for the operating room, for analyses during emergencies, on peripheral wards, for preclinical screening, or at times when availability of lab tests is time-consuming or limited. The test accuracy for electrolytes, blood gases, and Hb is high enough to justify routine use of the i-STAT analyser in clinical practice. That the nationally required quality standards for Ca, pH, and Hb were not met is not of importance because the measured deviation was too small to have clinical relevance. When analysing diluted blood with a low Hct and low oncotic pressure, it is important to activate the analyser's correction algorithm "CPB", because the obtained results will then comply with the required accuracy.