I.
PREPARATION FOR THE LAB SESSION
On the
morning of the lab, eat what for you would be a normal mid-week
breakfast. If you normally skip breakfast, make an exception
and have breakfast on the morning of your lab, as it will
be your only meal until late in the day. Finish your breakfast
between 8:00 and 9:00 AM, then refrain from eating or drinking
anything else, other than water, until you come to the lab.
II.
INITIAL PROCEDURES IN THE EXPERIMENT
At the
start of the lab period, you should:
1)
Make sure that
you have read and thoroughly understand the informed consent
form. If you intend to participate in the study, then sign the
informed consent, have a witness sign it, then turn the signed
sheet in to the lab assistant. If you decide not to participate
as a subject, please talk to the instructor before proceeding.
2) Draw
a letter from the lab assistant. The lab assistant will write
down your name and letter, but will not see any of the data.
Data which you turn in for inclusion with the class data will be
identified by your letter only, not your name.
3) Write
your assigned letter at the top of your data sheet.
4)
Determine your weight in pounds and calculate the appropriate
sugar and Nutrasweet values on Instruction Sheet #2.
The sugar
dosage will be based on an approximate "industry standard" of
100 grams of ingested glucose for an 85kg (185 lb.) subject.
5)
Draw a Subject Letter from the Fishbowl-of-Fate.
6)
Transfer your Subject Letter and calculated dosage values to
Instruction Sheets #3-5 and give them to the appropriate
assistants, as indicated in Instruction Sheet #1).
7) Your instructor will demonstrate the techniques for drawing
blood samples, measuring glucose concentrations in blood, and
testing for glucose and ketones in the urine. Following the
instructions given in sections IV and V below, take your initial
blood sample and immediately afterwards your urine
sample, or vice versa.
MAKE SURE THAT YOU FOLLOW THE
PROCEDURES FOR SAMPLING BLOOD EXACTLY, SO THAT THERE IS NO RISK
OF EXPOSURE TO THE BLOOD OF OTHER STUDENTS.
Record your blood and urine glucose levels, the volume of urine
collected, the time at which each of the samples was obtained,
and the elapsed number of minutes since you emptied your bladder
prior to class.
IF YOUR INITIAL BLOOD GLUCOSE
LEVEL EXCEEDS 120mg/dl, CONSULT WITH YOUR INSTRUCTOR BEFORE
PROCEEDING TO THE NEXT STEP.
8)
Receive a beverage from the lab
assistant. Double check to make sure that the letter on your
beverage cup matches your assigned letter. Drink the beverage,
and then return to the lab. We will treat the initial blood and
urine samples and the beverage consumption as though they all
occurred at the same time, so try to do all of them within a
span of 10 minutes. You should take no more than two minutes
to finish the beverage.
III.
MEASUREMENT OF BLOOD GLUCOSE CONCENTRATION
Blood
samples will consist of drops of capillary blood. The easiest
and most reliable location to draw these from is the fingers.
Quantitative measurements of blood
glucose concentration will be obtained with an electronic
monitor. You will each have your own area of benchtop covered
with plastic-coated paper, and
ALL PROCEDURES INVOLVING YOUR BLOOD
MUST BE CONFINED TO THAT AREA.
Sampling and Measurement Procedure:
1)
Remove a fresh test strip from the vial and immediately
reseal the vial. Do not touch sensor area on the tapered
end on the test strip. Insert the square end of the strip into
the monitor, with the sensor area facing upwards. After a few
seconds a code should appear at the top of the display, along
with an indication at the bottom of the display that the monitor
is ready to receive a drop of blood on the test strip. Make sure
that the code matches that on the test strip container. If this
fails to happen, contact the instructor. Remove the test strip
and return it to its container.
2) Wash
your hands/arms with antibacterial soap and warm water, and dry
them well. (Warm water helps stimulate good blood flow through
the capillaries in your fingers.) Clean your chosen sampling
site with an alcohol swab and allow it to air dry.
3)
Remove the lancet device from the alcohol bath and shake it
dry. Remove the lancet device cap, insert a lancet into the
lancet holder, twist off the protective lancet cover, replace
the lancet device cap, cock the lancet device, then set the
depth dial to an appropriate depth. For fingers chose a moderate
to deep depth. For the hand or forearm chose the deepest depth.
4)
Remove a fresh test strip from the vial and immediately
reseal the vial. Do not touch sensor area on the tapered
end on the test strip. Insert the unreacted test strip into the
monitor slot. After a few seconds the monitor display should
indicate that it is ready for sampling.
5) Use
the lancet device to prick the area that you swabbed. (It is
generally more comfortable to prick the side of your fingertip,
rather than the tip itself.)
6) Say,
DO NOT SCREAM, "ouch".
7)
Massage the area to produce a moderate size drop of blood.
Touch the exposed end of the test strip to the droplet of blood,
making sure that the blood wicks over the entire sensor pad
surface.
8) The
monitor display should switch immediately to a countdown from
10. Within 10 seconds the display should change again to your
blood glucose reading in mg/L. Record this value. If
you get an error message, the do the following:
a) discard the test strip in the Biohazard container
b) discard the used lancet in a Sharps container
c) mount a fresh lancet in the lancet device
d) go back to step 3 and repeat all steps.
Small blood samples which do not cover the entire sensor area
evenly are the most frequent cause of erroneous or failed
readings.
9) Wipe
the injured area with a fresh alcohol swab and apply an adhesive
bandage, if necessary. Discard the test strip in the BioHazard
container and discard the used lancet in a Sharps container.
10) Return
the lancet device, cap down, to the alcohol bath.
11)
Perform any necessary cleanup on your station as soon as
possible. All lancets go in the Sharps container. All items
potentially contaminated with blood, including alcohol swabs and
test strips, go in the BioHazard bag. Any bandages that you
decide to remove from your fingers should also be put into a
biohazard bag.
DO NOT DISCARD BLOOD-CONTAMINATED OR SHARP OBJECTS IN THE
GENERAL LAB WASTE BASKETS, AND DO NOT PUT SHARP OBJECTS INTO THE
BIOHAZARD BAGS.
IV.
EXTENDED MONITORING DURING THE REMAINDER
OF THE
LAB PERIOD
1)
Collect additional blood and urine samples every 30 minutes for
the next 3 and 1/2 hours.
2)
Record
the glucose concentrations and urine volume for each pair of
samples, as well as the time at which the sample was taken.
Note any special circumstances or deviations from the protocol
at the bottom of the results sheet. You may use your free time
between samplings to read or study, but refrain from eating
or drinking anything else until the end of the period.
If you feel nausea, light-headedness, or other types of
discomfort at any time, you may turn in your results sheet and
terminate your participation in the experiment.
3)
When you finish with all of your blood and urine samples, remove
your plastic coated paper and place it in a biohazard bag.
Check to make sure that you have filled in all of the spaces on
your results sheet, and then give your completed data sheet to
your instructor.
4)
Eat some
pizza and drink some water to "debrief" your digestive system.
V.
DATA ANALYSIS
Students
who chose not to participate as subjects in this study will be
responsible for collecting and tabulating the results.
1) Enter the data from
the collected data sheets into the Excel table provided by the
instructor.
2)
During the class period following the last lab session of the
week, your instructor will give you a copy of the tabulated
results from all the test subjects in the glucose- and
control-beverage groups.
3)
Using
these results, calculate the urine production rates (in ml/min)
for each subject. Then calculate the mean and standard
deviation of the blood and urine glucose concentrations and
urine production rates at each time point for the two groups.
(As an option, you may express each subject's data on a per unit
weight basis, prior to computing these group descriptive
statistics).
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