It depends on laboratory policy. Some will keep it up to a week, others may discard it immediately after analysis. 48-72 hours is common in the US at least. Slides are usually retained for longer periods in the event review is required since they're small and can be stored at ambient conditions for decades. Note that refrigeration is the only option for whole blood (freezing would cause hemolysis of the sample) and far more typical for serum or plasma storage. It's important to remember that different componenents of blood will degrade at different rates, so contacting the performing laboratory in case additional or repeat testing is required is key.
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Only one bottle they use ,but they get 7 bottles from me when they know that my blood is low.they said I need iron but get 7 bottles of blood from me when they only need 1 bottle for the test.where did the rest go? For blood donation !? 🙄
Blood collected for transfusion is never collected in these containers! Most containers are actually really small, only holding 5-7 mL (about a teaspoon) of whole blood. So 7 containers would be less than one sixteenth of the blood collected for transfusion! Some of those containers will only provide half of that volume since many components (glucose, potassium, sodium, cholesterol, etc.) are analyzed in serum. Different containers have specific preservatives that will behave differently. Light blue containers are used for coagulation testing, purple containers are used to preserve the cellular structures for analysis, yellow, red, and green containers are used for chemical (as well as microbiological or immunological) analysis, but each is different, and may not be used for all components. As an example, the green containers contain either sodium or lithium, which would obviously cause the lab to be unable to measure those analytes in that sample. Some containers may also be sent to reference laboratories for more specialized testing.
I have so much more patience for them now
Very well edited and insightful video!
Great work editing
Very useful laboratory
Great laboratory and the video directions are also awesome
Its so amazing and good maintain laboratory hazing and good work
l am going to be this professional after 3 years.
I love to see what happens during the whole process, it's amazing. How do they discard leftover blood? What about the vials?
it is store and pick up by a special waste management service
Why are the medical laboratory scientists assistants?
It s my dream to work here
How long is the blood frozen for in case it is needed??
It depends on laboratory policy. Some will keep it up to a week, others may discard it immediately after analysis. 48-72 hours is common in the US at least. Slides are usually retained for longer periods in the event review is required since they're small and can be stored at ambient conditions for decades. Note that refrigeration is the only option for whole blood (freezing would cause hemolysis of the sample) and far more typical for serum or plasma storage. It's important to remember that different componenents of blood will degrade at different rates, so contacting the performing laboratory in case additional or repeat testing is required is key.
هااي ايي دوله
my future plan!
DMLT camplited next course
What a bad sanitation wipe with the pad xD
Ouch 😁😁😂
👏👏👏
blud showed 100s of Jesus with human technology
Go posason owl fahr kante pahblek mahron 🪓 me wife Joan cat bagladas sotahpor mahron asah hoday posason ahsraf ahbeb nadeah pole melon rme rab rme poles debe farsabes owl gorop cat joan maseg hoday posason baek wolpahpar foto Lok folo oief hoday pon mobael baek wolpahpar bnp jamat uomelek kola bedas owl monte posason owl kante posason monte joan log col me fasan hoday posason joj kot hoday somate bagladas sotahpor posason go owl may owl gorop cat joan manos foto ahksara ahmar sobar oproson may pon mobael baek wolpahpar foto Lok folo oief hoday pon poja majar madok tahbej baras maseg owl ahkas mate owl uoproson ok
Only one bottle they use ,but they get 7 bottles from me when they know that my blood is low.they said I need iron but get 7 bottles of blood from me when they only need 1 bottle for the test.where did the rest go? For blood donation !? 🙄
It could be for a variety of tests which needs different containers and different volumes of blood.
Blood collected for transfusion is never collected in these containers!
Most containers are actually really small, only holding 5-7 mL (about a teaspoon) of whole blood. So 7 containers would be less than one sixteenth of the blood collected for transfusion! Some of those containers will only provide half of that volume since many components (glucose, potassium, sodium, cholesterol, etc.) are analyzed in serum.
Different containers have specific preservatives that will behave differently. Light blue containers are used for coagulation testing, purple containers are used to preserve the cellular structures for analysis, yellow, red, and green containers are used for chemical (as well as microbiological or immunological) analysis, but each is different, and may not be used for all components. As an example, the green containers contain either sodium or lithium, which would obviously cause the lab to be unable to measure those analytes in that sample.
Some containers may also be sent to reference laboratories for more specialized testing.
@@bobsmith7203what you said is completely true, but 7 bottles?!!! That's a bit too much...
And plus, some tests, like ESR, require a lot of blood.
Bio lab