In medicine venipuncture or venepuncture (also known as phlebotomy, blood draw, drawing blood or taking blood) is the process of obtaining a sample venous blood from a patient's vein. Usually a 5 ml to 25 ml sample of blood is adequate depending on what blood tests have been requested. In many circumstances it will be done by a phlebotomist, although nurses, doctors and other medical staff are also trained to take blood.
Blood is most commonly obtained from the median cubital vein, on the anterior forearm (the side opposite the elbow). This vein lies close to the surface of the skin, and there is not a large nerve supply.
Minute quantities of blood may be taken by fingersticks sampling and collected from infants by means of a heel stick or from scalp veins with a butterfly needle.
Phlebotomy (removal of blood) is also the treatment of certain diseases such as hemochromatosis and primary and secondary polycythemia.
Most blood collection is done with Vacutainer Brand or similar blood collection equipment consisting of a plastic hub, a needle, and a vacuum tube. Under certain circumstances, a syringe may be used, usually with a butterfly, which is a plastic catheter attached to a short needle. Blood is usually drawn from a vein in the crook of the elbow, the antecubital region. Tubes have color-coded stoppers to indicate what type of anticoagulant or other substance is in the tube. Tubes may contain no additive, a gel substance which separates cells from serum, or a variety of anticoagulants or preservatives (e.g. sodium heparin, sodium citrate, sodium fluoride and potassium oxalate or potassium EDTA).
Equipment needed includes: a plastic needle holder or "barrel", hypodermic needles designed specifically for the needle holder, an adjustable tourniquet, appropriate tubes, alcohol swabs, cotton wool, sticky tape, and a pen for labelling.
Below is a sample of the procedure used when blood is collected with vacutainers.
To prevent cross-contamination of samples with additives from other tubes, it is necessary to insert and withdraw Vacutainer tubes in a set order, referred to by phlebotomists as the "Order of Draw." When drawing blood for very sensitive testing, it is sometimes advisable to first draw a red top (no additive) tube, which is then discarded, to eliminate from the sample the interstitial fluid that comes from the puncture site rather than from the bloodstream. Subsequent tube order is deteremined by the need to prevent a tube's contamination by additivies used in a previous tube that might affect laboratory analyisis.
A syringe is used to manually extract blood from a patient. The very young, very old and anyone with problematic veins are all candidates for this old-fashioned method. Because syringes are manually operated, the amount of suction applied may be easily controlled. The procedure is similar to what is described in the section above. After the needle is inserted into the vein, the phlebotomist receives confirmation of success when a small amount of blood appears in the back of the needle. This is often referred to as 'flashback'. The plunger is then pulled backwards and blood fills the syringe. If the syringe plunger is pulled back too quickly red blood cells may be broken (hemolysed) by turbulence or physical forces as they are forced through the needle. The blood is usually transferred quickly to a vacutainer before clotting sets in using a similar defined tube order.
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"Venipuncture".
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