Different methods of assessing ketone body concentrations in blood and plasma of ketoacidotic patients have been compared. We confirmed that Ketostix reacts strongly with acetoacetate, giving a useful range of 0 to 10 mM for plasma acetoacetate, that acetone reacts weakly, and that 3-hydroxybutyrate does not react at all. Plasma Ketostix readings correlated only moderately well with enzymatically determined whole-blood acetoacetate. All samples giving a + + + reaction contained more than 1.6 mM acetoacetate while only 4 out of 21 samples showing 0 contained more than 0.4 mM. Comparison of Ketostix readings with total blood ketone body content showed poor correlation. One reason for this was the large variation in the ratio of 3-hydroxybutyrate to acetoacetate in ketoacidosis; another was that often Ketostix had been stored in such a way that they had become damp, which impairs their reliability. If the Ketostix reading and estimation of the blood pH show a discrepancy we suggest that an enzymatic assay should be used to determine the ketone bodies and lactate. © 1972, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Alberti, K. G. M. M., & Hockaday, T. D. R. (1972). Rapid Blood Ketone Body Estimation in the Diagnosis of Diabetic Ketoacidosis. British Medical Journal, 2(5813), 565. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.2.5813.565
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