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Case Reports
. 2017 Jun 15;27(2):430-433.
doi: 10.11613/BM.2017.047.

What´s floating on my plasma?

Affiliations
Case Reports

What´s floating on my plasma?

Janne Cadamuro et al. Biochem Med (Zagreb). .

Abstract

We report on a preanalytical issue we encountered during routine clinical chemistry analyses, potentially leading to deviated analysis results and believe that it might help other laboratories to overcome similar problems. In a heparin-gel tube we measured an implausible glucose value of 0.06 mmol/L. Re-measurement of the same sample resulted in a glucose value of 5.4 mmol/L. After excluding an analytical error, we inspected the sample closer and found a white material as well as fatty droplets floating on the surface of the plasma tube. Evaluation of these structures revealed that the white particulate matter (WPM) consisted of fibrinogen, platelets and leukocytes and the fatty droplets most probably originated from the separator gel. We concluded that these structures formed a temporary clot in the instruments pipetting needle thereby altering the sampling volume and subsequently the measured glucose value. The formation of WPM might be attributable to high speed centrifugation, high cholesterol levels, the gel formulation or a combination of several issues such as temperature, heparin concentration, pH and patient-specific factors. The gel droplets were most probably caused by an aberrant gel formulation in combination with an improper storage of the empty tubes on the wards prior to phlebotomy. After adding an additional instrument cleansing cycle and changing to another batch of heparin tubes the problems could be significantly reduced.

Keywords: case report; lithium-heparin tubes; separator gel; white particulate matter.

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Conflict of interest statement

Potential conflict of interest: None declared.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
White particulate matter as well as gel droplets floating on the surface of a heparin-plasma tube (picture taken with a USB microscope camera).
Figure 2
Figure 2
White particulate matter floating on the surface of a heparin-plasma tube (picture taken with a USB microscope camera).

References

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