Collecting blood samples

Well lit area.
Wear gloves.
Wear safety glasses.
Pathology collected.
Sharps disposal.
 

Taking blood samples using needles, cuvettes, test strips 

Attention

Vacutainer barrel and needle is the safest way to take blood. This helps prevent needle stick injuries

  • You must be in contact with your laboratory to collect samples using the right tube and to store and transport pathology correctly 
  • Warm cloth will improve blood flow to needle site
  • Do not use cuff or tourniquet for more than 1 minute
  • Instead of using tourniquet on small children ask helper to squeeze evenly around limb with hands taking care to avoid any needle stick injury
  • If person had mastectomy or fistula — use other side
  • Always let skin dry completely after wiping with alcohol

If you don’t have Vacutainer equipment or veins thin or difficult to find — use ordinary 21G needle and syringe or butterfly needle, both are hard to control with wriggling child and you will need help

What you need

  • Tourniquet, blood pressure cuff or helper’s hand
  • Alcohol wipes
  • Vacutainer barrel and needle 
    • OR syringe and 21–25G needle
    • OR butterfly (scalp vein) needle, 21–25G with screw-top bung
  • Blood tubes — type depends on test
  • Tray for standing tubes upright
  • Slides and holder if making blood slide
  • Gauze swab or cotton wool ball
  • Small sticking plaster
  • Centrifuge for spinning samples (if needed)
  • Sharps container

What you do

  • If taking more than one sample — follow Table 5.1

Table 5.1   Order of blood collection

Order Contents Test
Take first
Collect samples in the correct order by working down the list.

Take last
Aerobic
Anaerobic
  • Blood cultures — paired tubes or bottles
Sodium citrate
  • Clotting studies — INR, APTT, PT
Gel –
gives clotted blood for serum
  • UEC, creatinine, calcium, phosphate, magnesium
  • LFT, TFT
  • CRP
  • CK, LD
  • Uric acid (urate), lipids, alcohol
  • Iron studies, vitamin B12, folate
  • PSA, other tumor markers
  • Drugs, hormone levels, viral antibody screens, serum EPG, troponin
Heparin
  • Clozapine, perhexiline
  • Cholinesterase, transketolase
  • Cell surface markers, cytogenetics
EDTA 10mL
  • Blood group and cross match
  • Renin, ACTH
  • CMV culture/DNA PCR
EDTA 4mL
  • FBC, ESR, Hb, Hb electrophoresis, red cell folate, haemochromatosis study, viscosity
  • HbA1c
  • Ciclosporin, tacrolimus
  • Viral load/RNA PCR
  • Mercury, lead
Fluoride EDTA
  • Glucose, alcohol, lactate, homocysteine

4 ways to take blood from vein

1. Using Vacutainer needle and barrel

Figure 5.3  

Vacutainer made up of needle, barrel, blood tube.

  • Choose site
    • If elbow crease — put arm straight, rest on pillow/table covered with bluey
  • Put on tourniquet OR squeeze with helper’s hand OR use adult/paediatric cuff inflated to 80mmHg
  • Stretch skin over site, feel for swollen vein. Choose the one that feels biggest — may not be easiest to see
  • Clean site with 70% alcohol wipe and let dry
  • Use main (dominant) hand. With bevel of needle facing up, push needle in along vein
  • When needle in vein, use other hand to steady Vacutainer barrel against skin before putting first blood tube into barrel — Figure 5.4

Figure 5.4  

Blood tube connected to vacutainer barrel and needle.

  • Push tube into barrel until grey puncture needle has gone through tube’s rubber stopper. Blood will flow into vacuum sealed tube on its own
  • Wait until blood has stopped flowing into tube
  • Steady Vacutainer barrel against skin with one hand, take out blood tube with other
  • Some blood tubes need mixing straight away so invert tube once and stand up in tray — Figure 5.5 before putting next tube in barrel

Figure 5.5  

Tray of blood tubes.

  • Do this until all tubes have been filled
  • Take last tube out of barrel — unless also making a blood slide
  • Then undo tourniquet
  • Now take needle out of vein
  • Put pressure over bleeding site using dry gauze swab or cotton wool ball
  • Ask person to press on site. If using arm — keep straight to prevent bruising
  • Do not take used needle off a syringe or Vacutainer barrel with your fingers
    • Use needle release device if Vacutainer has one — Figure 5.6 and Figure 5.7
    • OR use groove at top of sharps container to unwind or pull off needle
    • OR put both syringe or barrel and needle straight in to sharps container

Figure 5.6  

Needle release devise.

Figure 5.7  

Dispose of needle into sharps container.

  • When bleeding from needle site has stopped, put on small sticky plaster or cotton wool ball and paper tape

2. Using butterfly needle

3. Using ordinary needle and syringe

  • Connect needle and syringe — size according to vein
    • 25G for small children, 21G for adult
  • Put needle into vein. See — Using Vacutainer needle and barrel
  • Take amount of blood you need to fill blood tubes then undo tourniquet
  • Take out needle, put pressure over bleeding site using gauze swab or cotton wool ball, ask person to press on site
  • Carefully push needle through rubber stopper of first tube. Blood will flow into tube by itself
  • Wait until flow stops, take needle out, invert tube, stand tube upright in tray. Do this until all tubes filled
  • When bleeding from needle site stopped, put on small sticky plaster or cotton wool ball and paper tape

4. Using needle only — good for small veins in children or the elderly

  • Take rubber stoppers off tubes (be careful not to tip them), stand in tray
  • Put needle into vein — Figure 5.8. See — Using Vacutainer needle and barrel
  • Let blood drop into tube — Figure 5.9 until you have amount needed

Figure 5.8  

Put needle into vein.

Figure 5.9  

Collect blood drops.

  • Undo tourniquet, take out needle and press firmly on site with cotton wool ball
  • Put stoppers back into tubes, make sure they are tight, invert tubes, stand tubes upright in tray
  • When bleeding from needle site stopped, put on small sticky plaster or cotton wool ball and sticky tape

For all 4 methods

  • Make sure all tubes are correctly labelled
  • Spin (centrifuge) tubes if needed, put in pathology bag
  • Check pathology form/s put in bag with labelled tubes
  • Store and transport as needed. Some samples may need to be refrigerated

Common blood tests

Whole blood (eg FBC)

  • Use EDTA tubes, usually purple or pink top
  • As soon as blood taken, mix well by inverting tube
  • Store and transport under refrigeration — try to send same or next day

Serum separated test (eg UEC)

  • Use plain/white top or SST/yellow top (gel-filled) tubes
  • After collection stand bloods for at least 10 minutes. Bloods need to stand upright first to clot before being spun or may get false results
  • Spin (centrifuge) at 4200RPM for 10 minutes until serum completely separated by gel. Properly separated serum/cells in tubes will last up to 1 week if stored correctly
  • Store in fridge and transport with ice bricks

Plasma

PTH

  • Use special white top PPT tube containing EDTA
  • Mix well by inverting tube several times
  • If more than 1 day delay getting tube to pathology — spin (centrifuge) tube
    • Do not separate or freeze the plasma
  • Collect 1 SST tube for calcium testing at the same time — even if not requested

INR

  • Use blue sodium citrate tubes
  • For test to work properly you must
    • Collect right amount of blood — fill to line indicated on tube
    • Make sure tube is in date — old tubes are not accurate
  • If using butterfly needle —
    • First draw blood down empty butterfly tubing using any tube (plain one will do) then discard tube. Otherwise some blood remains in butterfly tubing and you won't collect right amount
    • Change to blue top tube
  • As soon as blood taken, mix well by inverting tube
  • You have 4 hours to get blood to pathology. If any chance of delay — sample must be spun, plasma separated and frozen
    • Spin (centrifuge) as soon as you can for 20 minutes
    • Lift carefully out of centrifuge so plasma stays separated
    • Take tube top off, gently pipette clear yellowy plasma into 5mL plain screw cap tube. Be careful not to collect any red cells. If you do — put plasma back, re-spin
    • Freezing and transportmust stay frozen in transit

Blood for testing glucose levels, including OGTT

  • Use sodium fluoride–potassium oxalate/grey top tubes
  • As soon as blood taken, mix well by inverting tube 6–8 times
  • Store and transport under refrigeration 
  • Some laboratories require samples to be spun and plasma separated as described above as soon as possible (not frozen) — check with your laboratory

Making a blood slide

What you need

  • Pencil and pen
  • Clean, dust free glass slide with frosted end
  • Another slide to use as spreader
  • Slide holder

What you do

  • Label slide holder with pen, label frosted end of slide with pencil — Figure 5.10

Figure 5.10  

Write on slide with pencil.

For thin film
  • Need enough blood to make thin 4cm smear
  • If using Vacutainer — leave tube on needle as you take it out of arm, drop blood from needle tip onto slide — Figure 5.11

Figure 5.11  

Drop blood onto slide.

  • If using syringe — put drop of blood from needle onto slide before filling tubes
  • Holding spreader at 45° angle, gather blood into one spot — Figure 5.12
  • Using just one movement, push blood steadily back down slide — Figure 5.13

Figure 5.12  

Gather blood.

Figure 5.13  

Spread blood.

For thick film (eg malaria parasites)
  • Using Vacutainer or syringe put 3 drops of blood on slide — 1 in middle, 1 on either side in a triangle shape — Figure 5.14
  • In 1 circular movement, use corner of spreader to join drops up and make round shape about 1cm (10mm) across — Figure 5.15

Figure 5.14  

Triangle of blood drops.

Figure 5.15  

Circle of blood.

For both thin and thick smear
  • Leave slide to air dry, put into slide holder
  • Make sure it is correctly labelled
  • Store and transport under refrigeration

Blood cultures

Attention

If collecting blood cultures to send to hospital with person — write in letter/referral, ring hospital to let them know it is coming

  • Blood culture bottles for adults may be larger than those for small children, depending on brand — need to stock both
  • Store bottle in cool place, less than 25°C (eg pharmacy or fridge)
  • On each bottle, check use-by/expiry date, colour of fluid, rubber stopper intact
  • Use new, clean needle for each bottle

What you need

  • 2 blood culture bottles (10mL or child size), aerobic and anaerobic
  • Alcohol swab
  • 20mL syringe
  • 3 x 21G needles — 1 for taking blood, other 2 for putting blood into 2 bottles
  • Artery forceps to take needle off syringe
  • Tray for standing bottles upright

What you do

  • Take off metal or plastic seals/caps
  • Wipe rubber stoppers with alcohol wipe, let dry completely
  • Choose injection site, take blood using 20mL syringe and 21G needle
    • Take enough blood for both bottles — about 15mL (6–8mL each) for 10mL bottles
    • Using forceps or sharps container lid device, carefully take needle off syringe. Don’t contaminate end of syringe. Put needle in sharps container
    • Put on new sterile 21G needle, pierce rubber stopper to fill first blood culture bottle. If bottle not vacuum sealed — push blood into bottle gently
    • Change needle again, fill second bottle the same way
  • Mix well by inverting each bottle, stand upright in tray
  • Make sure bottles are correctly labelled
  • Store and transport at room temperature — remember to send with person in emergency

Oral glucose tolerance test

75g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT)

Attention

Remember: People who are acutely unwell (eg have a fever) may show incorrect reading

  • Record any medicines person is taking, these may affect test
  • Do fasting test in morning. Tell person
    • Not to eat or drink anything except water for 8–12 hours before test
    • They will have to wait in clinic for 2 hours
    • Not to eat or smoke during test — water is OK, but no tea, coffee, snacks
    • To rest for 30 minutes before test, keep resting during test

What you need

  • Pathology form
  • Blood collection equipment
  • Calibrated glucose meter
  • Pre-mixed solution containing 75g glucose OR 75g Glucose Challenge solution in 300mL water
  • 2–3 grey top/sodium fluoride–potassium oxalate tubes, label with time collected and
    • Fasting or O hour
    • At 1 hour, if needed (eg 24–28 weeks pregnant)
    • At 2 hours

What you do

Collecting blood — each time

  • Collect blood specimen in tube, add time taken to label
  • Put drop of blood from tip of needle on glucose meter testing strip to check blood glucose levels
  • On pathology form — record glucose meter BGL test result, note if fasting

Conducting test

  • Take first blood specimen in tube labelled 'Fasting' or '0 hour'
  • Give person glucose solution to drink in front of you. Should drink it all within 5 minutes
  • At 1 hour if needed (eg 24–28 weeks pregnant), take second blood specimen in 'At 1 hour' labelled tube
    • Mix well with oxalate by inverting 5–10 times
  • At 2 hours, take second/third blood specimen in tube labelled 'At 2 hours'
    • Mix well with oxalate by inverting 5–10 times
  • Give person a cup of tea and something to eat

Then

  • Make sure tubes are correctly labelled
  • Store and transport blood tubes under refrigeration