chapter 5 Flashcards

1
Q

who submits a laboratory test requisition to lab

A

nurse or physician, either computer based or written order

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2
Q

What information should the lab order have

A

patient id, gender, dob, doctors name, lab tests to be done, date of order date to be done

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3
Q

Label specimens accurately, and include

A

patients name, dob, phleb. initials, the date of collection, time of collection

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4
Q

Where should Bar codes be places

A

upper left hand corner of the specimen tubes

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5
Q

what do bar codes help reduce

A

TAT- turn around time

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6
Q

Radio Frequency Identification

A

Tiny silicon chips that transmit data to a wireless receiver

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7
Q

How many times do u need to invert tubes to make sure additives are mixed in properly

A

5-10 times at patients bedside

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8
Q

what time limit should all lab specimens be taken to the lab

A

no more than 45 minutes

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9
Q

what specimens require centrifugation right away

A

specimens that have blood thinner or anti coagulant

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10
Q

what do anticoagulant specimens turn into once centrifuged

A

turn into plasma

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11
Q

how long does it take for blood to clot

A

30 minutes

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12
Q

after centrifugation what should immediately be separated

A

plasma or serum

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13
Q

3 processes of centrifugation

A

Pre-centrifugation, centrifugation, post-centrifugation

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14
Q

when should handling and processing be done (pre centrifugation)

A

should be done asap

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15
Q

How long can u not exceed to separate plasma

A

do not exceed more than 2 hours

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16
Q

how do u protect photosensitive items

A

wrapping them in foil or placing them in amber specimen container

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17
Q

What is centrifugation

A

process of specimen by spinning at high speed

18
Q

where do heavy items move when centrifuged

A

(RBCs) move to bottom

19
Q

where do light items move when centrifuged

A

(plasma, serum) move to top

20
Q

How should u balance tubes when centrifuging

A

tubes should be same size and volume and placed opposite to each other

21
Q

Never do what when centrifuging

A

open the lid while centrifuging is still happen

22
Q

what’s the max amount of times u can centrifuge

A

1

23
Q

What happens during post centrifugation

A

serum is removed from plasma

24
Q

when is removal of serum and plasma advised

A

immediately after centrifugation (no longer than 2 hours)

25
Q

testing conditions may affect the

A

conditions serums might require

26
Q

how long should serum and plasm remain under room temp

A

no longer than 8 hours, if not refrigerate

27
Q

Chilled specimens

A

ammonia, lactic acid, pth

28
Q

how are chilled specimens chilled

A

slurry bath, ice bag, frozen tube holder ready

29
Q

Light sensitive (photosensitive) specimens

A

Bilirubin, Beta-carotene, B6, semen

30
Q

Warmed specimens

A

Cryofibrinogen

31
Q

What samples are heat sensitive

A

blood samples (keep at 2-8 degrees Celsius)

32
Q

Preparation of warmed species

A

prepare with special heat packs, transport at 36-38 degrees celsius, protect from bright light

33
Q

what temp should semen be transported at

A

body temp (37 C)

34
Q

Why should blood sputum and urine be transported to lab asap

A

to prevent growth of bacteria

35
Q

How to make sure u dont have false positives for urine analysis and cultures

A
  • 12 ml of specimen needed to perform test
  • Tell patients to clean genital area with cleansing wipe
  • Women need to clean from front to back
  • Void some into the toilet and catch urine midstream (called clean catch)
36
Q

how to make sure u dont have false positive for sputum cultures

A
  • Have patient collect mucus into sterile cup
  • Best specimen is to be collected morning before the patient eats
  • When collecting tuberculosis specimens the patient be really careful
37
Q

How to make sure u dont have false positive for blood cultures

A
  • Explain process in depth to the patient
  • The puncture site must be decontaminated, so it’s sterile
  • Type of collection tubes used must contain culture media that enable bacteria to grow under laboratory conditions
  • Timing and number of cultures obstained must be indicated, as well as location of venipuncture
  • Anaerobic bottle must be collected first
  • Aerobic bottle second
38
Q

what could interfere with blood cultures

A

o If other tests are ordered along with other lab tests, blood culture specimens must be collected first
o Do not scrape needle across skin
o Anaerobic method must be first in all, except in butterfly method
o Gently mix resin beads
o Sometimes two sets of blood cultured are ordered: same manner as the first except the second set needs to be obtained at the second site or at a different time, about 60 minutes
o Butterfly system to prevent backflow into vein. If using vacutainer system, make sure to have patient lower the rest of their body
o Blood cultures are often collected from patients who have fever of unknown origin (FUO). Bacteremia (presence of bacteria in the blood) or septicemia (presence of pathogens in the circulating bloodstream), also sometimes called blood poisoning, can occur

39
Q

specimen handling is part of what

A

pre-analytical phase

40
Q

why would specimens be rejected

A

o Short samples, hemolyzed (broken rbcs)
o Label and test request don’t match
o Label isillegible
o Anticoagulated tube contains blood clots
o Excessive delays in processing the specimen
o Hemolyzed blood specimens
o Impromper specimen transport or storage
o Incorrect blood volume (too little or too much
o Lipemic (cloudy or milky blood specimen)
o Non fasting blood specimen
o Use of outdated supplies to collect the specimen
o Timed specimens drawn at the wrong time
o Unlabeled specimens
o Contaminated urine specimens