Abstract

Background Measurements of free (ionized) calcium (iCa) are increasingly requested in patient care locations where immediate analysis is unavailable. Evacuated blood collection tubes containing lithium heparin and gel separator material are widely used in clinical laboratories, but little information is available on the effects of these tubes or of delay prior to analysis on the concentration or stability of iCa. Methods We collected blood from volunteers into lithium-heparin tubes (PST, Vacutainer ® PST™, BD Pre-Analytic Systems) of multiple lots and into electrolyte-balanced heparin syringes (Portex ® Dry Heparin, Smiths Medical). iCa was measured (Siemens 1265 blood gas analyzers) immediately and, in PST, at 0–7 h with or without transportation of the tubes from remote sites. Results The mean difference of free calcium results in the PST tubes and electrolyte-balanced syringes was − 0.08 (95% confidence interval − 0.17 to 0.012) mmol/l, and the SD of the residuals (S y, x) of the regression was 0.03 mmol/l. There was no detectable lot-to-lot variation in results. Free calcium was stable in tubes at room temperature and at 4 °C for at least 7 h with or without transportation. Conclusion iCa measured in the examined blood collection tubes is stable and unaffected by lot-to-lot variation of tubes, but results are slightly lower than with special blood gas syringes.

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