释义 |
Sahli Med.|ˈsɑːlɪ| The name of Hermann Sahli (1856–1933), Swiss physician, used attrib. and in the possessive with reference to a method he devised for determining the hæmoglobin content of the blood by converting a sample into acid hæmatin and adding water until the colour matches a standard.
1906R. C. Cabot Physical Diagnosis (ed. 3) xxiii. 465 Sahli's instrument..must be obtained from one of the firms recommended by him. Ibid. 569/2 (Index), Sahli's test for hæmoglobin. 1931Osgood & Haskins Textbk. Lab. Diagnosis ii. ix. 354 The ordinary type of Sahli apparatus is worthless because the acid hematin used as the standard fades too rapidly. Ibid. 347 Diluted to the 100 mark in a Sahli tube. 1956Nature 17 Mar. 524/1 No significant change was noted in the red-cell count; but there was a drop in the hæmoglobin-level from 81 to 70 per cent when tested by the Sahli method. 1974Passmore & Robson Compan. Med. Stud. III. xxi. 2/1 The Hb of blood is measured colorimetrically after it has been converted to a stable form. The methods available use acid haematin, oxyhaemoglobin or cyanmethaemoglobin. The simplest is the Sahli method. |