The stability of blood gases and CO-oximetry under slushed ice and room temperature conditions
- Authors
- Publication Date
- Sep 01, 2023
- Source
- eScholarship - University of California
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- Unknown
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Abstract
ObjectivesHuman blood gas stability data is limited to small sample sizes and questionable statistical techniques. We sought to determine the stability of blood gases under room temperature and slushed iced conditions in patients using survival analyses.MethodsWhole blood samples from ∼200 patients were stored in plastic syringes and kept at room temperature (22-24 °C) or in slushed ice (0.1-0.2 °C) before analysis. Arterial and venous pO2 (15-150 mmHg), pCO2 (16-72 mmHg), pH (6.73-7.52), and the CO-oximetry panel [total hemoglobin (5.4-19.3 g/dL), percentages of oxyhemoglobin (O2Hb%, 20-99%), carboxyhemoglobin (COHb, 0.1-5.4%) and methemoglobin (MetHb, 0.2-4.6%)], were measured over 5-time points. The Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia's (RCPA's) criteria determined analyte instability. Survival analyses identified storage times at which 5% of the samples for various analytes became unstable.ResultsCOHb and MetHb were stable up to 3 h in slushed ice and at room temperature; pCO2, pH was stable at room temperature for about 60 min and 3 h in slushed ice. Slushed ice shortened the storage time before pO2 became unstable (from 40 to 20 min), and the instability increased when baseline pO2 was ≥60 mmHg. The storage time for pO2, pCO2, pH, and CO-oximetry, when measured together, were limited by the pO2.ConclusionsWhen assessing pO2 in plastic syringes, samples kept in slushed ice harm their stability. For simplicity's sake, the data support storage times for blood gas and CO-oximetry panels of up to 40 min at room temperature if following RCPA guidelines.