Introduction
Arterial blood gas analysis (BGA) is an essential test used for years to provide precise assessment of oxygenation, ventilation, and acid-base status of critically ill patients. Results have a crucial role in monitoring patients with serial measurements, as even small variations can be of great importance due to the low biological variation of significant blood gas parameters (1-3).
Arterial blood gas analysis differs from other biochemical testings for providing such vital information in such a short time. Therefore, point of care devices are highly requested in emergency and intensive care units. However, fast results do not guarantee the correct results, as the devices out of laboratory control causes undetected errors (3,4). On the other hand, collecting and studying samples in the core laboratory brings along transportation caused interferences, such as clots and changed parameters due to prolonged storage, the pneumatic tube transport system caused air contamination, all of which shadows the value of the BGA (5,6).
According to the previous literatures, the blood gas specimens are among the most rejected samples which results in resampling, delay in analysis, and increased costs (7-9). It is still unknown under which conditions the stored samples maintain their stability or which samples can no longer give correct results. The diversity and inadequacy of the studies on this subject are also confusing and there are still reports that it is the right practice to transport the samples on ice. In addition to the variability of the ambient conditions, the syringe material used should be tested by the laboratory used, and poor quality devices should be eliminated (10,11).
Years ago, the glass syringes were replaced with the plastic ones for being safe and cheap. However, the permeability limits the usefulness of the plastic syringes instead of the less permeable glass ones that affects the results even beyond vital limits (12-14). We therefore tested the effect of storage temperature and time delay on blood gas stability. A subgroup analysis was performed to detect the effect of air on results during storage.
Materials and methods
Subjects
This experimental study was conducted in the intensive care unit (ICU) of the Izmir Atatürk Research and Training Hospital in an eight-month period. For the study, arterial blood samples were collected from 20 patients admitted to the same ICU, for whom daily arterial blood gas is required. The blood was obtained from their intra arterial catheter. We used 2 mL (electroliquid balanced 100 international unit dry lithium heparin) plastic syringes with gasket (Reference number: GNJ-S-2.5, Genject, Ankara, Turkey).
This study protocol was approved by the Interventional Clinical Studies Institutional Review Board (Reference number: 58/2018) of Izmir Katip Çelebi University, Turkey. The study design complies with the Declaration of Helsinki ethical standards. The legal guardian of each patient was informed about the procedure by the physician of the ICU, the co-author of the study. The written informed consents for the involvement in the study were signed by their legal guardian prior to blood collection.
Methods
A total of 10 plastic syringes of arterial blood was collected, 2 mL of each sample. Any visible air bubble in the sample was expelled carefully. Syringes were also checked for clots. All were inverted gently up and down, rolled between the palms before the analysis.
For the purpose of the study, syringes were divided into two groups to stand in two different temperatures (in the refrigerator (4 °C) and at room temperature (22 °C)), and to contaminate with air. Following immediate analysis for baseline, syringes were stored at 4 °C or at 22 °C, then studied after 30, 60, 90, 120 minutes. A subgroup analysis was performed to detect the effect of air on results during storage.
To contaminate with air, we pulled down the plunger to force the room air inside the syringe. Eight samples of each subject were reconstituted as 2 mL blood with 0.5 mL air. Each time point, one of the contaminated samples was studied. For the non-contaminated samples, analyses were performed with the same samples stored at two different temperatures. The temperatures of the room (ICU) and the refrigerator were continuously monitored using data loggers.
Samples were analysed for pH, partial pressure of oxygen (pO2), carbon dioxide (pCO2), hemoglobin oxygen saturation (sO2), bicarbonate (HCO3-), lactate, p50 (oxygen tension at 50% hemoglobin saturation), O2Hb (oxyhemoglobin), glucose, sodium, and potassium. Bicarbonate and p50 were calculated by blood gas analyser (bicarbonate from Henderson-Hasselbalch equation, p50 from sO2 and pO2)) (15,16). The analyser we used (ABL800 Flex (Radiometer, Copenhagen, Denmark)) has a co-oximetry module based on a multiwavelength spectrophotometric optical system that measures total hemoglobin concentration, O2 saturation, and Hb fractions such as oxyhemoglobin (O2Hb), deoxyhemoglobin (HHb), methemoglobin (metHb), carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) in a blood sample through the absorption spectra of the given analytes. The spectrophotometer is connected via an optical fiber to a combined hemolyzer and measuring chamber (16). In this study, sO2 and O2Hb were measured by co-oximetry. The methods the analyser used are tabulated inTable 1.
The analytical performance of the blood gas analyser was evaluated. The within-run imprecision was tested through the measurement of the quality controls (Qualicheck 5+) at two levels, supplied by Radiometer, in 10 sequential runs. The internal quality control was run daily during the study period. Same analyser in the ICU was used by the same laboratory practitioner.
Statistical analysis
Coefficients of variation (CV) of each parameter at each level were calculated with the formula CV% = standard deviation (SD)/Mean. The obtained precision estimates were compared against the preset desirable quality specifications for imprecision by Ricos et al. (17).
For bias estimation, the result of each parameter was compared with the baseline. Percentage deviations were calculated with the equation ((Cx - CB)/CB) x 100, where CB is the baseline value and CX the mean or median of the experimented sample.
The deviations were compared against the desirable quality specifications estimated by Ricos et al. and the Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia (RCPA) for allowable total error (17,18).
Statistical analyses were performed with paired samples t-test or Wilcoxon signed rank test, according to their distributions by using statistical package for Windows, Version 21.0, SPSS Inc. (Chicago, USA). A P value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Results
The CV’s calculated are presented inTable 1. The imprecisions were all within the estimated data by Ricos et al. (17). The data for pO2 and sO2 were not available in the preset criteria by Ricos et al., for which the estimated CV’s were < 1.4 and < 4, respectively.
Arterial blood gas results related to the time and temperature changes are shown inTable 2.
Without air bubbles
At room temperature, statistically significant decreases were observed for pH, glucose, potassium, and HCO3-, whereas statistically significant increases were found for pCO2, lactate, and p50. At 4 °C, statistically significant decreases were detected for pH, and glucose, whereas statistically significant increases were found for pO2, pCO2, lactate, potassium, HCO3-, sO2, O2Hb, and p50. Clinically significant biases were observed for pH, pCO2, lactate, and glucose at room temperature, for pO2 and pCO2 at 4 °C (Table 2).
With air bubbles
Air bubbles interfered pO2 quickly. In samples stored at room temperature, statistically significant decreases were observed for pH, HCO3-, glucose, and potassium, whereas statistically significant increases were found for pO2, pCO2, sO2, lactate, and p50. In samples stored in the refrigerator, statistically significant decreases were observed for pH and glucose, whereas statistically significant increases were observed for pO2, pCO2, sO2, O2Hb, HCO3-, lactate, potassium, and p50. Clinically significant biases were observed for pH, pO2, pCO2, lactate, and glucose at room temperature, for pO2 at 4 °C (Table 2).
Discussion
Changes in blood gas concentrations during storage have been evaluated in many studies under various conditions, hence resulted in different suggestions (19-21). According to our findings, BGA results were clinically acceptable in samples stored at room temperature for up to one hour, unexpectedly. However, contamination with air altered blood gases, especially the pO2, as expected.
The practice of keeping glass syringes on ice is an old practice to slow down the metabolism and is no longer recommended for plastic syringes (1,3). The rate of cellular metabolism is much faster in patients with very high leukocytes or platelet counts (3,22). The cells in the whole blood use glucose and O2, produce CO2, hence decrease the pH and increase lactate due to continued glycolysis. In this study, we used fresh blood samples to demonstrate cell metabolism. And we kept the syringes in the refrigerator in order to ensure homogeneous cooling at the specified degree. The small oxygen molecule (O2) is more vulnerable than larger CO2 molecules to diffuse across the plastic wall (13). The pores of the plastic syringe wall enlarge in the cold due to molecular contraction (23,24). Cooling the samples causes an increase in Hb’s affinity for oxygen to bind to deoxyhemoglobin, which promotes greater exogenous oxygen flow (24). This might result in the release of oxygen from the Hb when the sample is heated to 37 °C while analysis causes falsely increased pO2 (12,25).
In a study by Pretto and Rochford, plastic and glass syringes were compared for their gas preservation capacity (14). Glass syringes were found to be superior to plastic ones in preserving blood. As they observed similar increases in pCO2 accompanying a decrease in pH in both syringe types, they considered that these changes were due to cellular metabolism rather than diffusion through the syringe wall. In this study, we observed increases in pCO2 over time with a corresponding decrease in pH, possibly due to ongoing cell metabolism.
In an old study by Mahoney et al., 30 min delay in analysis of arterial blood in plastic syringes caused pO2 increases when iced (21). In the current study, at room temperature, pO2 stayed stable for 120 min, however, showed significant increases (from 7.3% to 26.7%) when chilled, beginning from 30 min. We can attribute the increases observed in the pO2 to the diffusion of oxygen through the plastic wall of the syringe and decreases to the continuing metabolism of the cells.
The lactic acid values are important, especially for critically ill patients which have been shown to correlate with the prognosis in the setting of sepsis (26). Under anaerobic conditions, lactate is the degradation product of the metabolism and in erythrocytes, glycolysis always terminates in lactate. Keeping the plastic syringes at low temperatures increases the gas permeability that causes O2 supply and limit the anaerobic metabolism hence minimizes lactate production. In this study, lactate increased more at room temperature with a concomitant acidosis, and with a corresponding pO2 decrease, and pCO2 increase. As expected, in cooled samples, both with the effect of slowed down of the metabolism and the air diffusion through the syringe wall, lactate production was lesser.
Hemoglobin oxygen saturation (sO2) indicates the percentage of the Hb binding sites that actually bind to oxygen molecules, and O2Hb indicates the oxygen carrying form of hemoglobin in relation to the total hemoglobin which is approximately equal to the oxygen saturation in healthy individuals (15). Oxygen saturation is an important variable in determining blood oxygen delivery in the body. In a study by Arbiol et al., where they stored samples in either iced water, at 4-8 °C and at 25 °C with a baseline sO2 > 95%, the samples were found as stable for sO2 for over 60 min (27). Smajić et al. stored plastic syringes at room temperature for 60 min and observed significant decreases in sO2 (-1.24%) (28). In our study, the sO2 changes were clinically insignificant with a baseline > 98%. And no clinically meaningful deviations were observed for O2Hb.
The partial pressure of oxygen required to achieve 50% hemoglobin saturation is represented as p50, which reflects the hemoglobin oxygen affinity and tissue oxygenation. This parameter is calculated by the blood gas analyser from oxygen tension (pO2) and saturation (sO2). In state of acidosis, p50 increases. In this study, we observed increases in p50, decreases in pH, which can be explained again with the continuing cell metabolism.
Sophisticated new blood gas devices made it possible to measure electrolytes and glucose in a short time, along with BGA in emergency and ICU units. Serial blood gas measurements allow serial electrolyte and glucose monitoring. This helps physicians in the diagnosis and monitoring of the blood gas and electrolyte imbalances. In this study, sodium, potassium, and glucose gave clinically acceptable results, irrespective of the storage conditions.
As expected, samples contaminated with air interfered pO2 quickly, similar to previous studies, and was greater in cold (29,30). However, blood pH stayed stable for over 90 min in all conditions. The stability of pH might be explained by the tight control and buffer capacity of blood (6). Bicarbonate was stable over two hours, unexpectedly, similar to a study (25). In a study by Toffaletti and McDonnell, adding air showed different effects on pO2 depending on the initial pO2 values even with small amounts of air (20 and 40 µL) (20). The direction of the changes in pO2 was very different with very low (< 9 kPa) and very high (> 24 kPa) initial values.
As a limitation of our study, for the air contaminated samples, the direction of change would be different according to the initial pO2, however, we did not experiment such extreme values (20). Besides, the results we obtained were for a type of plastic syringe, therefore the ingredients of different types of the syringe wall might affect the permeability variously.
For good laboratory practices, the laboratory technicians and health personnel have to be educated about the importance of this hardly obtained test material (1,4). They have to be warned about the air bubbles that should be expelled after withdrawing the sample as soon as possible and to transport without cooling samples.
In conclusion, correct BGA results are essential, and the arterial sample is precious. Therefore, if immediate analysis cannot be performed, up to one hour, syringes stored at room temperature will give reliable results when care is taken to minimize air within the blood gas specimen.