Demoncheaux E A G, Foster P J, Borland C D, Smith A P L, Higenbottam T W, Davies M B
Division of Clinical Sciences (South), School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Floor F, University of Sheffield, Beech Hill Road, Sheffield, UK S10 2RX.
Analyst. 2003 Oct;128(10):1281-5. doi: 10.1039/b310188f. Epub 2003 Sep 15.
A new real-time method for measuring a trace concentration of nitric oxide (NO) in a complex matrix routinely used in pharmacological studies of its bioactivity is described. NO was quantified as a gas by chemiluminescence after extraction from a continuous liquid sample flow with a limit of detection of 0.042 nmol dm(-3) at a signal to noise ratio of 3. Theories to calculate the concentration of NO in the liquid sample flow from a direct measurement of NO in the extraction carrier gas are presented. The efficiency of extraction is determined by a stopflow experiment. An example is presented of the measurement of the steady-state concentrations of NO in Krebs-bicarbonate buffer at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C when its liquid surface is sequentially exposed to gases containing various concentrations of NO in O2 plus CO2.