RESUMEN
The level of particulate contamination in a range of large volume injections has been measured using electrical resistance (Coulter) and light blockage (HIAC) techniques. Particle counts showed large variations between the two techniques and although a correlation could be shown for ionic solutions no such correlation could be found for sugar containing solutions. Shape factors alone cannot explain these discrepancies but other differences fundamental to the physics of the two measuring techniques play an important part. We conclude that results obtained using one technique cannot be correlated, theoretically or actually, with those obtained from the other technique.
Asunto(s)
Infusiones Parenterales , Conductividad Eléctrica , Nefelometría y Turbidimetría , Tamaño de la Partícula , SolucionesRESUMEN
The miscibility of short and long acting porcine, human and bovine insulins has been investigated using HPLC. Soluble insulin is rapidly lost from solution when mixed with both isophane and zinc insulin, although the mechanism may be different in these two cases. The time for up to 50% or more to be lost is often less than 2 min. The percentage lost is dependent upon the ratio of the mixture and the type and origin of the insulin. In the case of soluble: zinc mixtures it is greatest for porcine and least for bovine, in the case of soluble: isophane mixtures it was least for human and greatest for bovine. The greater the original amount of soluble insulin present the less the loss. The results help explain recent clinical reports that mixtures of soluble and zinc insulins fail to achieve satisfactory control of post-prandial blood sugar levels.
Asunto(s)
Insulina , Animales , Bovinos , Cromatografía Líquida de Alta Presión , Estabilidad de Medicamentos , Humanos , Plásticos , Solubilidad , Porcinos , JeringasRESUMEN
A multi-centre project has been run to identify laboratory tests capable of predicting the leakage performance of disposable incontinence bedpads. Each of 95 subjects tested each of six products for a week in turn and reported whether or not they and/or their carers found the leakage performance of each product acceptable. In addition, carers noted the severity with which individual used bedpads had leaked so that, when they had been weighed, their leakage performance could be determined as a function of urine weight. These clinical data were compared with results from the 16 different laboratory tests used routinely for bedpad evaluation in three hospital laboratories. Each test was evaluated by seeing how well the data it yielded correlated with the clinical test data. No individual test was very successful at predicting the performance of bedpads when used as sole protection but a combination of an absorption capacity test and an absorption time test predicted the percentage of users/carers finding leakage performance acceptable, accurate to within +/- eight percentage points for all six test products. A different absorption capacity test proved most successful for bedpads used as back-up to body-worn products. It predicted the percentage of users/carers finding leakage performance acceptable, accurate to +/- five percentage points for all six products.