Biochem Laboratory Lecture 1
Biochem Laboratory Lecture 1
Biochem Laboratory Lecture 1
Blood glucose levels are the amount of glucose that someone has in their blood at
any given time. Having high or low blood sugar levels could indicate an
underlying health condition that may require medical attention. Use this overview
of normal blood glucose levels to understand what your blood sugar levels mean.
Blood sugar levels can either be normal, high, or low, depending on how much
glucose someone has in their bloodstream. Glucose is a simple sugar that’s present
in the bloodstream at all times. Normal blood glucose levels can be measured when
someone fasts, eats, or after they’ve eaten. A normal blood glucose level for adults,
without diabetes, who haven’t eaten for at least eight hours (fasting) is less than
100 mg/dL. A normal blood glucose level for adults, without diabetes, two hours
after eating is 90 to 110 mg/dL.
Principle
Glucose reduces the cupric ions present in the alkaline copper reagent to cuprous
ions or the cupric sulfate is converted into cuprous oxide, which reduces the
phosphomolybdic acid to phosphomolybdous acid, which is blue when optical
density is measured at 420 nm.
Reagents Required
Procedure
Pipette out standard glucose solution 0 to 1-mL range and make up the solution to
2 mL with distilled water. Add 2 mL of alkaline Cu-reagent to all the test tubes.
Mix the contents and keep them in a boiling water bath for 8 minutes. Cool under
running water without shaking and then add 2 mL of phosphomolybdic acid
reagent to all the test tubes. Wait for 10 minutes and mix the content. Make up the
volume to 25 mL with distilled water. Take the optical density at 420 nm.
Result:
Glucometer is a medical tool that is used for measuring the approximate level of
glucose in the blood.
ii. Most of the glucometers are based on electrochemical technology which use
electrochemical test strips to perform the measurement.
iii. A small drop of the solution that is to be tested is placed on a disposable test
strip that the glucometer uses for the glucose measurement.
ii) The gluconic acid thus formed then reacts with another chemical in the testing
strip called ferricyanide. The ferricyanide and the gluconic acid then combines
with each other and forms ferrocyanide.
iii) As soon as the ferrocyanide has been formed the device (i.e., glucometer) runs
an electronic current through the blood sample on the strip.
iv) This current thus generated is able to read the ferrocyanide and identify the
amount of glucose present in the blood sample on the testing strip.