intro to blood tube selection Flashcards
what is serum
the liquid remaining from the blood sample after it has been allowed to clot and spun. NO FIBRINOGEN (because in the clot)
what information can be gleaned from serum
- chemical constituents in the circulation
- antibodies
what is whoe blood
blood that has not been allowed to clot or spun.
what can be gleamed from whole blood
- cell counts (hematology)
- certain cellular chemistry
what is plasma
the liquid spun off of blood that has not been allowed to clot (fibrogen still included)
what can be gleaned from plasma
- chemistry constituents in the circulation
- fibrogen info
what are the main coagulation cofactors that are targeted in anticoagulents
- calcium ion
- anti thrombin
Describe how EDTA tubes prevent clotting
- calcium chelator
- tightly binds calcium not reversible
- applied to tube as dry power coat (K salt)
describe how citrate tubes prevent clotting
- forms ionic complexes with ionised calcium
- reduces iCa below that needed for coagulation cascade
- reversible
- can add ca back into sample to allow coagulation to proceed
- liquid in bottom of tube
what are citrate tubes used for and why
- measuring coagulation times and factors (just add Ca back in for coagulation to proceed)
- transfusions (citrate metabolised in vivo)
how do oxalate tubes work to prevent clotting
inhibits blood coagulation by forming insoluble complexes with calcium ions which is necessary for coagulation
how do fluoride tubes work for preventing clotting and what are they commonly used for
- inhibits RBC metabolism and bacterial action
- inhibits glycolysis
- preserves glucose samples
describe how lithium heparin tubes work
- depends on presence of anti-thrombin 3 in the smaple
- promotes AT ability to bind (inactivate) factor 10a
- locks AT and thrombin together
- lithium as the salt so that Na and K levels can still be measured
- used for clinical chem
why is proper tube fill important
concentrations of anticoagulant:
- EDTA causes osmotic effects and can shrink cells if under filled leading to mis counting in machines
- citrate depends on having just the right amount of calcium binding, if over fill there will be enough calcium for clotting to proceed
- liquid anticaugulants can dilute samples
what is the fill order of blood tubes and why is fill order relevent
- culture
- citrate
- serum
- serum seperator
- heparin
- EDTA
- fluoride oxalate
important to follow order so no cross contamination occurs (dont want EDTA anticoagulant on sample you want to clot or if you have a clotting stim dont want that in and EDTA)