| Literature DB >> 24266294 |
Nora Nikolac1, Vesna Supak-Smolcić, Ana-Maria Simundić, Ivana Celap.
Abstract
Phlebotomy is one of the most complex medical procedures in the diagnosis, management and treatment of patients in healthcare. Since laboratory test results are the basis for a large proportion (60-80%) of medical decisions, any error in the phlebotomy process could have serious consequences. In order to minimize the possibility of errors, phlebotomy procedures should be standardised, well-documented and written instructions should be available at every workstation. Croatia is one of the few European countries that have national guidelines for phlebotomy, besides the universally used CLSI (Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute) H3-A6 Procedures for the Collection of Diagnostic Blood Specimens by Venipuncture; approved Standard-Sixth Edition (CLSI, 2007) and WHO (World Health Organization) guidelines on drawing blood: best practices in phlebotomy (WHO, 2010). However, the growing body of evidence in importance of preanalytical phase management resulted in a need for evidence based revision and expansion of existing recommendations. The Croatian Society for Medical Biochemistry and Laboratory Medicine, Working Group for the Preanalytical Phase issued this recommendation. This document is based on the CLSI guideline H3-A6, with significant differences and additional information.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24266294 PMCID: PMC3900082 DOI: 10.11613/bm.2013.031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Med (Zagreb) ISSN: 1330-0962 Impact factor: 2.313
Verification of patient’s preparation for venipuncture.
| Fasting | When did you have your last meal? | A large proportion of laboratory tests are influenced by dietary intake ( | |
| Fasting | Only water drinking is allowed prior to venipuncture. | Most drinks contain sugar that could influence the results of glucose measurement. In addition, a large proportion of drinks contain active substances that can affect laboratory tests with known (i. e. enzyme induction or inhibition, substrate competition) and unknown mechanisms ( | |
| Fasting, therapy | Are you taking any vitamins, food supplements, herbal or natural based medicines? | These supplements may have known or unknown biological effects, medicinal effects, or even technical effects on measuring (e.g. vitamin C in faecal occult blood test, riboflavin in dipstick urine testing). Any information about taking these supplements should be documented ( | |
| Patient position | Were you resting for 15 minutes prior to blood sampling? | If patient is excited and is not rested prior to blood sampling, increased production of hormones (i.e. catecholamines and corticosteroids) can alter concentration of a large number of proteins, lipids and carbohydrates ( | |
| Therapy | Are you receiving any kind of anticoagulant therapy? | PT INR should be measured prior to taking OAT. Also, thrombophilia screening tests (LAC, protein C, protein S, APCR) cannot be performed if the patient is already receiving OAT ( | |
| Menstrual cycle | What is the current day of your menstrual cycle? | Concentration of female hormones depends on the day of the menstrual cycle ( | |
| Dietary habits | Are you fasting for 12 hours? Did you have protein-rich meal within last 48 hours? | Protein-rich meals can cause falsely elevated homocysteine concentration ( | |
| Therapy | Were you receiving any oral or intravenous supplements containing iron within the last 10 days? | Consumption of iron supplements or too little time after discontinuing of taking those preparations causes falsely elevated iron concentration ( | |
| Dietary habits | When did you have your last meal? Did you have any changes in diet within the last two weeks? Did you consume alcohol within the last 48 hours? Were you engaged in extreme physical activity within the last 48 hours? | For the measurement of the lipid status, compliance to the recommended protocol is required since any discrepancies influence results of the measurement and, in most cases, cause falsely elevated concentrations of lipids ( | |
| Therapy | Do you have your usual therapy with you (i. e. insulin or oral hypoglycaemics)? | When performing measurement of postprandial glucose, the patient should simulate an everyday meal and therapy regime. If receiving oral hypoglycaemics, the patient should take their meal and therapy after sampling for fasting glucose has been done. Deviation from the usual protocol can cause variations in the result of the test ( | |
| Therapy | When did you take last dose of the drug? What is the name of the drug you are receiving? | Therapeutic drug monitoring should be done after the drugs are at a steady state and blood collection performed immediately prior to taking the next dose of the drug ( | |
| Therapy | When did you take last dose of levothyroxine? | Levothyroxine should not be taken in the morning before blood sampling is done, since hormones cause falsely elevated concentration of T4/freeT4 ( |
PT INR - prothrombin time, international normalized ratio; OAT - oral anticoagulant therapy; LAC - lupus anticoagulant; APCR - activated protein C resistance
FIGURE 1Veins of the Forearm.
Order of draw (10, 48, 49).
| Blood culture tube | Various | ||
| Glass or plastic non-additive serum tube (without clot activator) | Red | ||
| Coagulation tube | Light blue[ | ||
| Serum tube | Gel separator tube | Red | |
| Tube without gel | Red[ | ||
| Tube with thrombin based clot activator | Orange | ||
| Heparin tube | With gel separator | Green[ | |
| Without gel separator | |||
| EDTA tubes | Without gel separator | Lavander[ | |
| With gel separator | Lavander[ | ||
| ESR tubes | Black[ | ||
| Glycolysis inhibitor tubes | Gray[ | ||
| Other tubes that contain anticoagulants or additives | |||
Top colours are adjusted to most commonly used manufacturers in Croatia:
BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company, Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA) and
Greiner Bio-One (Grainer Bio-One, Kremsmünster, Austria).
EDTA - ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid; ESR - erythrocyte sedimentation rate.
Recommendations for tube mixing by two manufacturers commonly used in Croatia - BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company, Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA) and Greiner Bio-One (Kremsmünster, Austria).
| Grainer Bio-One tube mixing | 3–4 | Coagulation test (citrate tubes) |
| 8 | Serum tubes with clot activator or gel, plasma heparin or EDTA tubes with clot activator or gel, whole blood EDTA tubes, ESR tubes, trace elements tubes (all kind), blood group tubes (ACD additive), tubes with glycolysis inhibitor | |
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| BD tube mixing | 0 | Glass serum tube with clot activator |
| 3–4 | Coagulation test (citrate tubes) | |
| 5 | Plastic serum tube with clot activator and gel | |
| 8 | Serum tube with thrombine based clot activator, plasma heparin or EDTA tubes with clot activator or gel, whole blood EDTA tubes, ESR tubes, trace elements tubes (all kind), blood group tubes (ACD additive), tubes with glycolysis inhibitor | |
EDTA - ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid; ESR - erythrocyte sedimentation rate; ACD - acid citrat dextrose; BD - Becton, Dickinson and Company).
FIGURE 2One mixing cycle.
Analytes that require special handling procedures after blood collection.
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| Amphotericin B | ( | Transport specimens wrapped in a foil immediately after collection and store protected from the light until analysis. |
| Bilirubin | ( | |
| Carotene | ( | |
| Chlordiazepoxide | ( | |
| Chlorpromazine | ( | |
| Isoniazid | ( | |
| Methotrexate | ( | |
| Porphobilinogen | ( | |
| Porphyrins | ( | |
| Pyridoxal 5-phosphate | ( | |
| Rifampin | ( | |
| Thioridazine | ( | |
| Trifluoperazine | ( | |
| Vitamin A | ( | |
| Vitamin B1 | ( | |
| Vitamin B2 | ( | |
| Vitamin B3 (niacin) | ( | |
| Vitamin C | ( | |
| Vitamin E | ( | |
| Vitamin K1 | ( | |
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| Ammonia Lactate | ( | To chill a specimen, place it immediately in a mixture of ice and water (ice slurry not big ice cubes). Do not put the specimen in direct contact with ice or dry ice to avoid hemolysis. Chilling whole blood specimens for longer than two hours is contraindicated for determination of potassium levels. |
| Pyruvate | ( | |
| Gastrin | ( | |
| Homocysteine | ( | |
| Renin | ( | |
| Parathyroid hormone | ( | |
| Catecholamines | ( | |
| Adrenocorticotropic | ( | |
| hormone | ( | |
| Free fatty acid | ( | |
| Acetone | ( | |
| ACE | ( | |
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| Cold agglutinin | ( | For determination of cold agglutinins, an EDTA tube should be used. For cryofibrinogen and cryoglobulins, use tubes that do not contain any additives, all collection supplies must be pre-warmed, keep the sample at water bath heated at 37°C until serum can be separated from the cells, separate the serum from the cells within 1 hour of collection. |
| Cryofibrinogen | ( | |
| Cryoglobulins | ( | |
ACE – angiotensin-converting enzyme. Reference numbers are presented in parenthesis.
FIGURE 3Step-by-step phlebotomy procedure.