Malin M J, Mihalik M C, Sclafani L
Anal Biochem. 1983 Mar;129(2):434-45. doi: 10.1016/0003-2697(83)90574-2.
Whole blood hematocrit was determined by an approach which depends on the diffusion of an inert probe, to which red blood cells are impermeable, from a small agarose gel into a stirred, much larger blood sample. Blood cells influence the diffusion rate of the probe by, on the average, physically blocking a fraction of the gel surface. The blocking effect increases with the hematocrit. Cyanocobalamin (B-12) was found to be a suitable probe because it did not penetrate, bind to, or lyse blood cells and was not bound by plasma solutes. The loss of B-12 from gels in contact with blood was monitored by determination of the absorbance change at 540 nm of gels which had been quickly rinsed. The visible spectrum of B-12 in agarose gels was identical to the spectrum in water. Beer's Law was obeyed in 1-mm thick agarose gels over a concentration range of 0.1-0.8 mM. Based on the results from 48 blood samples covering the hematocrit range 25-69, a least-squares line was generated with a slope, -3.46 X 10(-3) delta A/hematocrit unit, a Y intercept of 0.295, and a correlation coefficient of 0.971. The precision of the technique was +/- 9.7%. The assay was insensitive to mean corpuscular volume and sample volume as long as the latter was 50-fold larger than the gel volume. The diffusion coefficient for B-12 in 1% agarose gels was found to be 1.4 +/- 0.2 X 10(-6) cm2 sec-1.