Safety, SPX Collection, and Processing
Safety, SPX Collection, and Processing
Safety, SPX Collection, and Processing
• Recognition of hazards
• Application of common sense
• Safety-focused attitude
• Good housekeeping in all laboratory work and storage areas
EMPLOYER’S RESPONSIBILITIES
• Establish laboratory work methods and safety
policies
• Provide supervision and guidance to employees
• Provide safety information, training, personal
protective equipment, and medical surveillance to
employees
• Provide and maintain equipment and laboratory
facilities that are adequate for the tasks required
EMPLOYEE’S RESPONSIBILITIES
• Know and comply with the established laboratory work safety
methods.
• Have a positive attitude toward supervisors, co-workers, facilities, and
safety training.
• Give prompt notification of unsafe conditions or practices to the
immediate supervisor and ensure that unsafe conditions and practices
are corrected.
• Engage in the conduct of safe work practices and use of personal
protective equipment.
SAFETY EQUIPMENT
• Developed specifically for use in the laboratory
• Safety showers (deliver 30 to 50 gallons of water
per minute at 20 to 50 pounds per square inch
(psi) and be located in areas where corrosive
liquids are stored or used)
• Eyewash stations(within 100 feet or 10 s travel),
fire extinguishers periodically tested and
inspected
• Others: fire blankets, spill kits, and first aid
supplies.
• Mechanical pipetting device must be used to
manipulate liquids
BIOLOGICAL HAZARD
Physical hazards
• Avoid running in rooms and hallways
• Watch for wet floors
• Bend the knees when lifting heavy objects
• Keep long hair pulled back
• Avoid dangling jewelry
• Maintain a clean, organized work area
TYPES OF SAFETY HAZARDS
PHLEBOTOMY AND CONSIDERATIONS
SITES TO BE AVOIDED
VASCULAR ACCESS DEVICE & EDEMATOUS
AREA
INTRAVENOUS LINE
ARTERIAL LINE
ARTERIOVENOUS SHUNT OR FISTULA
HEPARIN OR SALINE LOCK
CENTRAL VASCULAR ACCESS DEVICE
GENERAL PRECAUTIONS IN COLLETING BLOOD SAMPLE
SITES TO BE AVOIDED
BURNED, SCARRED & TATTOOED
AREAS
GENERAL PRECAUTIONS IN COLLETING BLOOD SAMPLE
SITES TO BE AVOIDED
HEMATOMA
GENERAL PRECAUTIONS IN COLLETING BLOOD SAMPLE
SITES TO BE AVOIDED
POST-MASTECTOMY SITE
GENERAL METHODS OF BLOOD SAMPLE COLLECTION
PHLEBOTOMY
SKIN PUNCTURE
ARTERIAL PUNCTURE
VENIPUNCTURE
SKIN PUNCTURE
• Dermal puncture, capillary puncture, prick method
• For micromethod, ultramicromethod and nanoliter
method
• The method of choice for
• Pediatrics
• Geriatrics
• Obese patients
• Sites of puncture
• Palmar surfaces of fingertips
• Lateral plantar heel surface
• Plantar surface of the big toe
• Earlobes
MATERIALS & EQUIPMENT
ORDER OF DRAW
EDTA SPECIMENS
OTHER ADDITIVE SPECIMENS
NON-ADDITIVE SPECIMEN
PROCEDURE
• Position patient and select an appropriate puncture site
• Warm the site using warm towel if applicable
• Cleanse the puncture site
• Prepare equipment
• Make a puncture perpendicular to the skin surface
• Wipe away the first drop with clean gauze pad
• Collect blood specimen in a suitable container
• After collection, apply pressure
• Label specimen and dispose used materials
VENIPUNCTURE
• For macro-method
• Sites of collection:
• Veins in the antecubital fossa
• Median cubital vein
• Cephalic vein
• Basilic vein
• Vein of the longitudinal sinus, sagittal
sinus
• Femoral vein, wrist vein
• Great saphenous vein
• Veins on the dorsal portion of the hand
MATERIALS & EQUIPMENT
Tourniquet
A tourniquet is applied to a patient’s
arm during venipuncture
It should be tight enough to restrict
venous flow but not arterial flow.
One (1) minute application rule
MATERIALS & EQUIPMENT
Syringe sytem
Includes a plastic syringe, a needle, and a transfer
device
Syringe needles are available in a wide range of
gauges and lengths for many different uses.
Syringes have a barrel with graduated markings and a
plunger that fits snuggly into it.
Transfer device is like a tube holder with a needle
inside.
MATERIALS & EQUIPMENT
Evacuated tubes
• Syncope or fainting
• Transient loss of consciousness due to lack of oxygen in the brain & results in an
inability to stay in an upright position
• Remedy: patient’s head is lowered between legs & instructed to breath
deeply; give spirit of ammonia
COMPLICATIONS OF VENIPUNCTURE
Delayed local complications
• Thrombosis of veins
• Formation of blood clots inside the lumen of the vein due to trauma
• Thrombophlebitis
• Inflammation of the vein caused by thrombus
• Hematomas
• Blue or black skin discoloration commonly due to repeated trauma or puncture of the veins
COMPLICATIONS OF VENIPUNCTURE
• Hematological smear
• Drop of blood spread thin on a microscope slide
• EDTA blood specimen
TYPES OF BLOOD SMEAR
• The angle between the slides is dependent upon the size of the
blood drop and viscosity of the blood. The optimal angle is 45
degrees.
• The larger the drop of blood and lower the haematocrit, the higher
the angle needs to be so the blood smear is not too long.
• Blood with a higher haematocrit needs to have a lower angle so the
smear is not too short and thick
• Glass slides must be clean; otherwise, this results in imperfect
distribution of cells and improper staining.
• Once the drop of blood has contact on the slide, the smear needs to
be made immediately. Otherwise, the blood will clump and dry,
again resulting in uneven distribution of WBC and platelets.
PROCEDURE
• Smear preparation
• Fixation of smear using methanol
• Stain using Wright or Wright-Giemsa stain
• Place 1 drop of cedar-wood oil on the edge of the
smear
• Use OIO (100x) and perform zigzag method
• Count and classify 100 WBC using Schilling’s counter
too acidic suitable too basic
MICROSCOPY FOR DIFF COUNT
HEMOGLOBIN AND HEMATOCRIT
OXYGEN DISSOCIATION CURVE
REFERENCE VALUE OF HEMOGLOBIN
MALE : 42% TO 52 %
FEMALE : 37 % TO 47%
NEWBORN : 53 % TO 65%
CHILD : 30 % TO 43 %
Methods of Hgb Determination
• MACROMETHOD
• MICROMETHOD
MACROMETHOD: PROCEDURE