| Literature DB >> 23457763 |
Abstract
Blood gas testing is a commonly ordered test in hospital settings, where the results almost always have the potential to dictate an immediate or urgent response. The preanalytical steps in testing, from choosing the correct tests to ensuring the specimen is introduced into the instrument correctly, must be perfectly coordinated to ensure that the patient receives appropriate and timely therapy in response to the analytical results. While many of the preanalytical steps in blood gas testing are common to all laboratory tests, such as accurate specimen labeling, some are unique to this testing because of the physicochemical properties of the analytes being measured. The common sources of preanalytical variation in blood gas testing are reviewed here.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23457763 PMCID: PMC3900096 DOI: 10.11613/bm.2013.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Med (Zagreb) ISSN: 1330-0962 Impact factor: 2.313
Errors in the phases of laboratory testing, from (8). Preanalytical steps focused on in this review are highlighted in bold.
| Preanalytical | Error in sorting/routing, mistake in aliquot, pipet error, mislabel of aliquot, centrifuge speed time inappropriate. |
| Analytical | Instrument malfunction, incorrect sample loaded, endogenous/exogenous interference with assay, quality control failure that is undetected. |
| Postanalytical | Inappropriate validation of data, failure to report/report sent to wrong location, lengthy turnaround time, data entry/transcription error, critical value not reported. |
| Post-postanalytical | Ordering provider misses laboratory report or delays action, results incorrectly interpreted, inappropriate response to results, failure to consult correct service for assistance. |
Physiologic or iatrogenic confounders in blood gas measurement.
| Decreased (increased) temperature | pO2 | Decreased (Increased) | Gas solubility increases at lower temperatures | ( |
| pCO2 | Decreased (Increased) | Gas solubility increases at lower temperatures | ( | |
| pH | Increased (Decreased) | Note: specific substances that interfere with standard pH electrodes are extremely uncommon | ( | |
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| Leukocytosis/thrombocytosis | pO2 | Decreased | Increased metabolism consumes oxygen, and fragile cells can lyse to produce increased potassium as well | ( |
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| Aberrant hemoglobin | SaO2 | Variable | High oxygen affinity hemoglobins have altrered dissociation curves, and discrepant apparent oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry and blood cooximetry. Fetal hemoglobin also has a different absorbance spectrum than adult hemoglobin, and can lead to spurious cooximeter results. | ( |
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| Colored substance in blood | SaO2 | Variable | Methylene blue and some vitamin B12 (cobalamin) preparations can interfere with spectrophotometric measurements used in cooximetry | ( |
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| Anaesthetic gases (halothane, nitrous oxide, isoflurane) | pO2 | Increase | These substances can diffuse across gas-permeable membranes in older instruments and be reduced along with oxygen at the electrode | ( |
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| Delay in analysis | pO2 | Decrease | Decreases 2 mmHg/hr at room temperature (or greater with elevated white blood cells) | ( |
| pCO2 | Increase | Increases 1 mmHg/hr at 22C (or greater with elevated white blood cells) | ( | |
| pH | Decrease | pH decreases 0.02–0.03 pH units/hr at 22C (or greater with elevated white blood cells) | ( | |