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Stability of Electrolytes in Whole Blood at Room Temperature Prior to Centrifugation: implications for Clinical Analysis

IMPACT SIGNAL76/100
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Information from the abstract

Background/Objectives The pre-analytical stability of electrolytes in capped whole blood at room temperature remains uncertain due to limited studies and inconsistent findings. This study investigates electrolyte stability during delayed centrifugation, in accordance with recent EFLM recommendations. Materials and methods The stability of electrolyte concentrations (sodium, potassium, chloride, and bicarbonate) was assessed in capped whole blood samples from 40 participants stored at room temperature at three time intervals (0, 2, and 4 hours) prior to centrifugation. Differences in electrolyte concentrations were expressed as percent deviation (%PD) from baseline (T0). The %PD for each analyte was calculated and compared with the maximum permissible difference (MPD), derived from intra- and inter-individual biological variation. Results The calculated MPD values for sodium, potassium, chloride, and bicarbonate were 1.5%, 4.2%, 1.9%, 10.8%, respectively. The mean %PD at 2 hours for sodium, potassium, chloride, and bicarbonate was 0.2, 0.1, -0.4, and -0.3, respectively. At 4 hours, the mean %PD values were 0.3, 2.1, -0.7, and -0.4, respectively. All mean %PD values remained within the MPD limits at both 2 and 4 hours, with potassium showing a higher mean %PD at the 4-hour time point compared to 2 hours. Conclusions Sodium and potassium concentrations increase over time, while chloride and bicarbonate concentrations decrease. Electrolytes in capped whole blood stored at room temperature with delayed centrifugation remained stable for up to 4 hours. However, potassium appeared to be more susceptible to changes due to delayed processing. . Timely sample handling is therefore critical to ensuring accurate electrolyte measurements.

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Why this record is monitored

This record has an Impact Signal of 76/100 based on recency, source, collaboration, and bibliographic signals. It prioritizes monitoring and is not a judgment of research quality.

Related topics: Clinical Laboratory Practices and Quality Control · Renal function and acid-base balance · Potassium and Related Disorders

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Thai researcher and institutional participation

Sayamon Janyapaisarn · Maneenooch Torngsawarng · Napaporn Inganuruksakul · Sureerut Pornthadavity · Theerawut Chanmee · Sumana Mas‐oodi · Mahidol University

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Data limitations

This page is a bibliographic record based on abstract-level information, not a full analysis or quality assessment. Verify the DOI and original article before citation.