Download - Types of punctures
TYPES OF
PUNCTURESBy Dr Fatehia Awny
Faculty of Health Sciences .
BAU 2015
Skin puncture Earlobe puncture.
Types of punctures:
Finger puncture heel stick
1. for patients in whom venous access is difficult,
2. when small quantities of blood are sufficient for
testing.
In newborns, heel sticks are the preferred
collection method for small volumes of
blood.
Why Perform a Skin Puncture?
CAPILLARY COLLECTIONS MAY BE
PREFERABLE OVER VENIPUNCTURE:
Severely burned patients
Obese patients
Patients with thrombotic tendencies
Elderly patients or others in whom superficial veins
are very fragile or inaccessible
Patients performing self-testing
Point-of-care testing
Newborn testing
Patients who have a paralyzing fear of needles
Differences Between Skin Puncture Blood and
Venipuncture Blood!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
FINGER PUNCTURE:
Preparation for finger stick
1. Place all collection materials
on top of disposable pad.
Open the lancet, alcohol
swabs, gauze, bandage, and
other items. Have all items
ready for blood collection.
FINGER PUNCTURE:
CHOOSE THE FINGER CAREFULLY
Best locations for a finger stick is the 3rd and 4th fingers of the non-dominant hand.
Avoid the 2nd and 5th fingers if possible.
Perform the stick off to side of the center of the finger.
NEVER use the tip or center of the finger.
FINGER PUNCTURE:
Massage or Warm the site• Avoid fingers that are cold,
cyanotic, swollen, scarred
or covered with a rash.
• Massage to warm the
finger and increase blood
flow by gently squeezing
from hand to fingertip 5-6
times.
FINGER PUNCTURE:
Clean and DRY the site
Cleanse fingertip
with 70% isopropyl
alcohol
Wipe dry with clean
gauze or allow to air
dry.
Caution: Alcohol can
falsely elevate or lower
blood glucose results.
FINGER PUNCTURE:Hold the finger in an upward
position and lance the
finger (across the
fingerprint) between the
side and the pad with the
proper size lancet
(adult/child). Press firmly
on the finger when making
the puncture. Doing so
will help you to obtain the
amount of blood you need.
FINGER PUNCTURE:
Finger Stick location
• Using a sterile lancet, make a skin puncture just off the center of the finger pad.
• Wipe away the first drop of blood (which tends to contain excess tissue fluid).
5. Apply slight pressure
to start blood flow.
Blot the first drop of
blood on a gauze pad
and discard in
appropriate biohazard
container.
FINGER PUNCTURE:
Keep the finger in a downward
position and gently massage it
(but do not “milk”) to maintain
blood flow.
FINGER PUNCTURE:
SUMMARY
If child is <12 months of age, the lancet
must have a depth of 2 mm or less, and a
fingerstick MAY NOT be performed – must
do a heel stick instead
The heel is used for dermal punctures on infants
less than 1 year of age because it
contains more tissue than the finger, and has not
yet become callused from walking.
No nerves ,bones or tendons near by
WHY HEEL STICK?
Hatched areas (arrows)
indicate safe areas for
puncture site.
heel stick:
Warm site with soft cloth moistened with warm water (up to 41
oC) for 3 – 5
minutes.
HEEL STICK:
Cleanse site with
alcohol prep.
Wipe DRY with sterile
gauze pad.
HEEL STICK:
Puncture heel.
Wipe away first
blood drop with
sterile gauze pad.
Allow another
LARGE blood drop
to form.
HEEL STICK:
Mainly used for bleeding time .
Principle
The bleeding time is the time it takes for a small
standardized wound, introduced into the capillary bed
of the finger or earlobe,to stop bleeding. It is
dependent upon:
1- the elasticity of the skin and capillary vessels,
2-the efficiency of the tissue fluids
3-the mechanical and chemical action of the
thrombocytes (blood platelets).
EARLOBE PUNCTURE:
Make a small wound 3 mm deep in the lateral aspect of a fingertip or the lower portion of the ear lobe, using a suitable lancet. The wound should be sufficiently deep to give a free flow of blood without squeezing.
Start the stop watch immediately after the puncture is made. Though the stop watch is started a few seconds after puncturing the skin, very little error results in the bleeding time.3.
At intervals of one-half minute gently blot the blood from the wound with a piece of filter paper, being careful not to touch the skin.4.
EARLOBE PUNCTURE:
The interval of time between the puncture and the
cessation of bleeding is the bleeding time. The
blood should fail to appear on the filter paper in 1-3
minutes. All abnormal findings should be
rechecked.
NORMAL : 1-3 minutes
EARLOBE PUNCTURE:
Specimen Types
Blood
–Proper collection vial
–Collection comprised of two bottles:
Aerobic
Anaerobic
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Blood culture bottles.
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SPECIMEN TYPES
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PHLEBOTOMY
Phlebotomy procedure
Important to all laboratory testing
Sample’s quality determines accuracy of its final result
Anticoagulant
Mixed with blood to prevent coagulation
Three anticoagulants are used in the hematology
laboratory
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PHLEBOTOMY
Anticoagulant EDTA – prevents coagulation by chelating Ca2+
Use for tests: CBC, Hct, Plt, Retic, peripheral blood smearexamination, flow cytometry
Sodium citrate – prevents coagulation by binding Ca2+
Used for coagulation studies
Lithium heparin – prevents coagulation by interactingwith antithrombin Used for osmotic fragility: not appropriate for routine
hematology testing
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EQUIPMENT
Sample collection tubes Evacuated sample collection tubes
Sterile
Color coded to indicate type of anticoagulant present or the
lack of anticoagulant
Only small amounts of sample for analysis necessary
Interior of a sample collection tube is a vacuum
Capillary punctures Microcollection tubes
Do not contain a vacuum
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CAPILLARY PUNCTURE
Collection tubes
Should be properly labeled with patient’s name, unique
ID number, date, and time of collection
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SPECIMEN COLLECTION
Anticoagulant of choice
Sodium citrate, 3.2%
Ratio of anticoagulant : whole blood is 1:9
> 55% hematocrit
Smaller volume of plasma relative to citrate
Excess free citrate binds calcium in the test procedure
Falsely prolonged clotting times
Adjust citrate concentration
Citrate tubes are available that draw 4.5 mL, 2.7 mL, 1.8 mL
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SPECIMEN COLLECTION
Anticoagulant to blood ratio
1:9 ratio critical for valid results
If under-filled – ↑ citrate, bind calcium in test procedure
Falsely prolonged test results
If overfilled – insufficient calcium bound
Clotting can occur in tube
Falsely prolonged results
Accurate labeling of tube
Include pre-or postinfusion, time of draw
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SPECIMEN COLLECTION
Specimen draw time
Check patient history of receiving blood products
If testing done within the half-life of administered clotting factor
then test may measure transfused component as well as the
patient's component
Fibrinolytic factors – diurnal variability
Platelet studies – medication history
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SPECIMEN PROCESSING
Plasma for coagulation testing
Citrated whole blood is centrifuged
Platelet-poor plasma (PPP)
Platelet-rich plasma (PRP)
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SPECIMEN PROCESSING
Platelet-poor plasma
Citrated specimen centrifuged for 15 minutes at 2500xg
< 10 x 109/L platelets
Depending on coagulation instrumentation
Leave plasma on top of packed cells or
Remove plasma with plastic pipette – plastic tube with cap
Leave small amount of plasma on top
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SPECIMEN PROCESSING
Use platelet-poor plasma because Platelets contain PF4
Neutralizes heparin
Platelets contain phospholipids Affect LA testing and factor assay testing
Platelets contain proteases Alter results for von Willebrand testing
Any clot in specimen Specimen unacceptable
After removing PPP, twirl applicator stick in packed cells to
detect clots
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SPECIMEN PROCESSING
Platelet-poor plasma
Separated plasma
Stored at 18-24°C or 2-8°C for up to 4 hours
If testing is delayed > 4 hours
Stored at -20°C for up to 1 week
Stored at -70°C for up to 6 months
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SPECIMEN PROCESSING
Platelet-poor plasma
Frozen specimens
Thawed rapidly at 37°C
Excessive heating can destroy Factor V and VIII
Never store in self-defrost freezers
Special testing may require special collection and
storage procedures
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