2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.diabres.2009.09.018
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Bedside capillary blood glucose measurements in critically ill patients: Influence of catecholamine therapy

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Cited by 21 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Among the 21 selected studies [15-35], 11 studies [15-25] used ISO criteria, the error-grid method, or percentage of values within 20% of the error of a reference; three studies [26-28] used agreement with criteria other than these criteria, and seven studies [29-35] used only bias for evaluation (Figure 1, Table 1). …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Among the 21 selected studies [15-35], 11 studies [15-25] used ISO criteria, the error-grid method, or percentage of values within 20% of the error of a reference; three studies [26-28] used agreement with criteria other than these criteria, and seven studies [29-35] used only bias for evaluation (Figure 1, Table 1). …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bias was assessed for Glu-ABGs in five studies [15-18,20], for Gluco-C in 13 studies [18,20-27,29-31,33,34], and for Gluco-A in 12 studies [18,20-23,25,27,28,30-32,35]. The mean differences varied between -2.7 mg/dl [17] and 25.2 mg/dl [16] in Glu-ABGs, between -16 mg/dl [23] and 9.9 mg/dl [22] in Gluco-C, and between -10 mg/dl [23] and 23.0 mg/dl [32] in Gluco-A.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The measurement error of blood glucose analysis is affected by various factors, including hematocrit and PaO 2 of the sample blood, as well as drugs, blood sampling site, and type of measurement devices. In particular, patients with out-of-range blood glucose [ 187 ], those with anemia [ 188 ], hypotensive patients [ 188 ], and those required catecholamines [ 189 ] tend to have larger errors in blood glucose measurement.…”
Section: General Management and Supportive Therapymentioning
confidence: 99%