Gentle blood aspiration and tube cushioning reduce pneumatic tube system interference in lactate dehydrogenase assays

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Abstract

Background: Use of a hospital pneumatic tube system may be associated with measurement errors. Methods: A venous blood sample was collected from 79 patients into a pair of lithium heparin tubes; one tube was sent to the laboratory by porter and the other was sent via the pneumatic tube system. Plasma lactate dehydrogenase concentrations were then assayed. Results: Lactate dehydrogenase concentrations were overestimated (median bias: 18.8%) when evacuated vacuum lithium heparin tubes were sent by pneumatic tube system. This bias was reduced by bubble-wrapping the standard lithium heparin tube or using Monovette lithium heparin tubes in aspiration mode (median bias: +8.7% and −0.3%, respectively). Conclusions: Cushioning and aspiration-mode sampling may limit pneumatic tube system-associated overestimation of lactate dehydrogenase concentrations.

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Strubi-Vuillaume, I., Carlier, V., Obeuf, C., Vasseur, F., Maury, J. C., Maboudou, P., … Brousseau, T. (2016). Gentle blood aspiration and tube cushioning reduce pneumatic tube system interference in lactate dehydrogenase assays. Annals of Clinical Biochemistry, 53(2), 295–297. https://doi.org/10.1177/0004563215586600

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