Int J Sports Med 1992; 13(1): 56-59
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1021235
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Influence of Blood Handling Techniques on Lactic Acid Concentrations

P. A. Bishop1 , M. May2 , J. F. Smith1 , J. Kime1 , J. Mayo1 , M. Murphy1
  • 1Human Performance Laboratory, The University of Alabama
  • 2Department of Chemistry, Ohio State University
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
14 March 2008 (online)

Abstract

Despite the popularity of measuring blood lactic acid concentrations, many of the common variations in technique have not been evaluated. The purposes of this study were to: 1) establish the relationship between plasma and blood lactate concentrations, 2) determine the inter-analyzer reliability, and 3) assess the stability of lactate concentration in blood stored for up to one week. Blood was sampled from 26 volunteers before exercise, at 80% of estimated maximum heart rate, and 5 minutes after a treadmill run to exhaustion. Inter-machine reliability was tested between two Yellow Springs Instruments analyzers with buffer treated with a lysing agent and between two without. Blood lactate levels at all three levels could be predicted from plasma with R2 > .95. Correlations between duplicates on the same machine were greater than .96 for blood and .97 for plasma. In the worst cases, between duplicate differences and between machine differences were 2%. Lactate in stored blood was in some cases significantly different after 24 hours of storage. Moderate and high lactate concentrations in plasma were not significantly altered after 2 days of storage.

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