Smartphone-Enabled Quantification of Potassium in Blood Plasma

Sensors (Basel). 2021 Jul 12;21(14):4751. doi: 10.3390/s21144751.

Abstract

This work describes a new method for determining K+ concentration, [K+], in blood plasma using a smartphone with a custom-built optical attachment. The method is based on turbidity measurement of blood plasma solutions in the presence of sodium tetraphenylborate, a known potassium precipitating reagent. The images obtained by a smartphone camera are analyzed by a custom image-processing algorithm which enables the transformation of the image data from RGB to HSV color space and calculation of a mean value of the light-intensity component (V). Analysis of images of blood plasma containing different amounts of K+ reveal a correlation between V and [K+]. The accuracy of the method was confirmed by comparing the results with the results obtained using commercial ion-selective electrode device (ISE) and atomic absorption spectroscopy (AAS). The accuracy of the method was within ± 0.18 mM and precision ± 0.27 mM in the [K+] range of 1.5-7.5 mM when using treated blood plasma calibration. Spike tests on a fresh blood plasma show good correlation of the data obtained by the smartphone method with ISE and AAS. The advantage of the method is low cost and integration with a smartphone which offers possibility to measure [K+] on demand and in remote areas where access to hospitals is limited.

Keywords: blood plasma; point-of-care testing (POCT); potassium quantification; smartphone; sodium tetraphenylborate; turbidity.

MeSH terms

  • Ion-Selective Electrodes
  • Plasma
  • Potassium*
  • Smartphone*
  • Tetraphenylborate

Substances

  • Tetraphenylborate
  • Potassium