JGK,
Thanks for taking a look. Yes, we are planning to use standard blood bags containing citrate because that is what is commercially available. The protocol I want to use will be to remove all the citrate from the bag, reserving some portion in a syringe, and discarding the rest. Then, as cells are added to the bag a small quantity will be added back.
A standard blood bag is definitely overkill, hence the problem. Indeed we do not want to inject cells directly into the bag as putting few cells into a large volume of acidic material is not good for them. That is why I need to know what is required to bind all the free calcium, after which I will overshoot by some small percentage (say 110%) just to be sure. The other issue is that standard blood bags are designed to store mixed cell populations for up to 35 days, and I am not sure what happens to the bound calcium during storage. We use the cells within 2-3 hours so the requirements are different, hence I am trying to understand the requirements precisely.
How did you come up with 1.1? I stink at chemistry and am trying to understand this so that I can develop a spreadsheet that customizes the quantity to the patient's starting calcium and hematocrit values. Whatever detail and education you can provide is greatly appreciated.