Mj. Ashenden et al., Skin-prick blood samples are reliable for estimating Hb mass with the CO-dilution technique, EUR J A PHY, 79(6), 1999, pp. 535-537
Citations number
10
Categorie Soggetti
Physiology
Journal title
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY AND OCCUPATIONAL PHYSIOLOGY
Investigation of the impact of environmental stimuli such as altitude expos
ure on hemoglobin mass currently rely on invasive techniques that require v
enous blood sampling. This study assessed the feasibility of lancet skin pr
icks as an alternative to venepuncture to estimate hemoglobin mass with the
carbon monoxide (CO) dilution technique, with the intent of making the tec
hnique accessible to technicians without phlebotomy training. Sixteen healt
hy volunteers rebreathed CO via a small-volume rebreathing apparatus. Blood
was sampled simultaneously with a glass syringe (VEN) from a superficial f
orearm vein and with a capillary tube from either a lanced fingertip or ear
lobe (CAP). As a control, VEN blood was then aliquoted into capillary tubes
(CONTROL-CAP). Samples were assayed for carboxyhemoglobin (HbCO) using a d
iode-array spectrophotometer. Mean %HbCO was higher in CAP than VEN (bias 0
.3 +/- 0.2%HbCO, p < 0.01), but VEN and CONTROL-CAP were not different (p =
0.55). Compared to VEN, Hb mass derived from CAP samples was overestimated
by 1.7% (15 +/- 22 g Hb p = 0.01). CAP samples to estimate Hb mass demons;
rated a technical error of measurement of 2.7%, which is comparable to the
1.9% reported previously with VEN samples. We conclude that using CAP sampl
es gives a reliable measure of %HbCO, and will make the estimation of Hb ma
ss with the CO-technique accessible to technicians without phlebotomy train
ing.