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Electrolytes Information and Courses from MediaLab, Inc.

These are the MediaLab courses that cover Electrolytes and links to relevant pages within the course.

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Laboratories Individuals

Chemical Screening of Urine by Reagent Strip
Measuring Specific Gravity

The reagent strip measures specific gravity in increments of 0.005 with readings from 1.000 to 1.035. The test principle is based on a change in pKa (the negative log of the acid disassociation) of certain pretreated electrolytes (methylvinyl ether/maleic anhydride) in relation to ionic concentration of the urine. These electrolytes in the reagent area contain acid groups which disassociate according to the ionic concentration of the specimen. The more ions in the specimen, the more acid groups will become disassociated, releasing hydrogen ions and causing a more acid pH. The reagent area contains a pH indicator (bromthymol blue) which demonstrates the change in pH. The higher the specific gravity of the urine specimen, the more acidic the reagent area will become. The colors of the reagent area will range from deep blue-green in urines of low ionic concentration to green-to-yellow green in urines of increasing ionic concentration, and consequently, higher specific gravity.

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CLIA Chemistry / Urinalysis Review
Which of the following electrolytes is most likely to be spuriously elevated in a hemolyzed specimen:View Page

CLIA General Laboratory Review
Which of the following would most likely occur as the result of hemodilution:View Page

Phlebotomy
Electrolytes panel (Lytes)

Blood is tested for the most important electrolytes (salts): Sodium (Na) Potassium (K) Chloride (Cl) Carbon dioxide (CO2)Can be run on serum or plasma.

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Panels or profiles

These are some of the panels you will frequently encounter: Hemogram (CBC)Electrolytes (Lytes) Basic Metabolic Profile (BMP)Comprehensive Metabolic Profile (CMP)

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Plasma components

Plasma is the liquid portion of the blood. It contains many substances including:Water Electrolytes Sugars Proteins Lipids Drugs & Toxins

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Plasma electrolytes

Electrolytes are salts dissolved in water, including:Sodium (Na) Potassium (K) Chloride (Cl) Bicarbonate (CO2). Calcium (Ca)

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