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Frequently Asked Questions

Can the BD Vacutainer® Plus Plastic EDTA Tube be used for routine blood bank procedures?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
Yes, the BD Vacutainer® K2EDTA Plus Plastic Tube has received routine FDA clearance for red cell grouping, Rh typing, and antibody screening. The differences are the types of closures and the labeling. The lavender stopper can either be rubber or a Hemogard™ closure on a Plus Plastic Tube. Product 367899, a 6 mL Plus Plastic Tube, has a distinct pink Hemogard™ closure and a label that meets the American Association of Blood Banks requirements. See similar questions...

What are BD Vacutainer® Plus Plastic Blood Collection Tubes?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
The BD Vacutainer® Plus Plastic Blood Collection Tube is a shatter-resistant plastic blood collection tube developed to provide venous blood specimen collection, transport and processing equivalent to our cenventional glass evacuated tube line. The BD Vacutainer® Plus Plastic Tube is made of PET (polyethylene terephthalate). They can withstand up to 10,000 RCF in a balanced centrifuge. See similar questions...

What is the preservative in the BD Vacutainer® Plastic UA Preservative Tube?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
The preservative in the BD Vacutainer® UA Preservative tube is a combination of Chlorhexidine, Ethyl Paraben and Sodium Propionate. It is a mercury free preservative that meets the EPA and American Hospital Association's requirements for a mercury free disposal environment. See similar questions...

Is the BD Vacutainer® Plastic UA Preservative Tube compatible with analyzers?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
The BD Vacutainer® Plastic UA Preservative Tube is compatible with the Bayer Clinitek Atlas®, the BMC Iris 900UDX® and the manual KOVA® systems. BD does not recommend using the Culture & Sensitivity preservative tube for routine urinalysis testing. Erroneous results may be seen for several of the chemistry parameters. See similar questions...

What coatings layer the walls of BD Vacutainer® Plus Plastic Serum Tubes?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
BD Vacutainer® Plus Plastic Serum Tubes are coated with silicone and micronized silica particles to accelerate clotting. A silicone coating reduces adherence of red cells to tube walls. See similar questions...

Can the BD Vacutainer® Safety-Lok™ Blood Collection Set be used with a syringe?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
The BD Vacutainer® Safety-Lok™ Blood Collection Set can be used with a syringe when it is used without a luer adapter. The syringe will attach to the female end of the Safety-Lok™ Blood Collection Set. Once the blood has been drawn into the syringe, ensure that the safety mechanism on the winged needle set is properly activated. The use of any needle for the purpose of transferring blood directly from a syringe to a specimen container continues to be prohibited by Federal OSHA. See similar questions...

How can the 1.8 mL and 2.7 mL BD Vacutainer® Plus Plastic Coagulation Tubes be differentiated?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
The 1.8 mL tube has a light blue rubber stopper covered with a translucent shield and the 2.7 mL tube has a light blue rubber stopper covered with a solid light blue shield. We monitor for the following metals in our BD Vacutainer® Blood Collection Tubes: Antimony Arsenic, Cadmium, Calcium, Chromium, Copper, Iron, Lead, Magnesium, Manganese, Zinc. See similar questions...

What is the preservative in the BD Vacutainer® Culture & Sensitivity Tube (gray top)?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
The preservative in the BD Vacutainer® C&S (gray top) tube is a combination of sodium formate and boric acid. The preservative helps to preserve the level of bacteria present at collection. See similar questions...

How should BD Vacutainer® Blood Collection Tubes be stored before use?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
BD Vacutainer® Blood Collection Tubes should be stored at 4° - 25°C (39° - 77°F), unless otherwise noted on the package label. See similar questions...

Why is there an expiration date on BD Vacutainer® Blood Collection Tubes?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
The expiration date indicates the shelf life of the product as determined by functional testing. To assure accurate draw and test reliability, tubes must be used by the expiration date. Expiration dates are printed on every BD Vacutainer® Blood Collection Tube and its packaging. The tube expires on the last day of the month printed on the label. See similar questions...

Are BD Vacutainer® Tubes sterile?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
Yes, BD Vacutainer® Blood Collection Tubes have a sterile interior. Tubes are sterilized by gamma radiation. See similar questions...

Can BD Vacutainer® Tubes be re-sterilized?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
BD Vacutainer® Tubes are irradiated to achieve sterility. These tubes are sterile on the interior only. We cannot recommend re-sterilizing the tubes, i.e., ETO (ethylene oxide) or autoclaving, primarily due to pressure changes that take place during the re-sterilization cycle. Our tubes are under a specific negative pressure. During the re-sterilization cycle this negative pressure may be disrupted and therefore the tubes may not draw the proper blood volume. See similar questions...

How are BD Vacutainer® products packaged?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
Most BD Vacutainer® Blood Collection Tubes and needles are packaged 100/box and 1,000/case except for the Eclipse needle that is packaged 48/box. See similar questions...

What is the minimum volume of blood that should be collected into a BD additive tube?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
BD tubes are designed to yield within ± 10% of the stated draw volume on the label of the additive tube throughout the entire shelf life. (NCCLS Evacuated Tubes and Additives for Blood Specimen Collection-Fourth Edition H1-A4 Vol.16 #13 December 1996) Because of the large volume of the tube that remains unfilled after draw (headspace), platelet activation can occur. Platelet activation can result in the neutralization of the heparin in the specimen and affect the final APTT result. See similar questions...

WHAT IS EDTA?

Frequently asked questions about Oral Chelation Formula, Liv...
EDTA is a synthetic amino acid. Amino acids are the building blocks of protein. EDTA is approximately one-third as toxic to the body as aspirin. EDTA chelation therapy in an intravenous solution was first introduced into medicine in the United States in 1948 as a treatment for lead poisoning. Shortly thereafter the U.S. Navy advocated the use of chelation therapy for sailors who had absorbed lead while painting ships and military facilities using lead-based paint. The U.S. See similar questions...

Can I re-centrifuge BD Vacutainer® gel tubes?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
BD does not recommend re-centrifuging gel tubes once the barrier has formed. Re-centrifugation could cause cell lysis, resulting in the release of intracellular contents into the serum or plasma. See similar questions...

Why are you taking more than one tube of blood?

Syracuse University Health Services
Some tests require a specific amount of blood. A lot of tests require the use of serum, so the blood is collected in a tube where it is allowed to clot and then separated. Some tests require special anticoagulant or preservatives in the tube. See similar questions...

What is the clot activator in BD Vacutainer® SST™ Serum Separation Tubes?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
The silica particles that coat the walls of the BD Vacutainer® SST™ tube are the clot activator. Initial activation occurs when blood enters the tube and contacts the particles on the tube wall. To continue the activation process, it is necessary to thoroughly mix the blood and particles by inverting the tube five times. The walls of BD Vacutainer® SST™ Serum Separation Tubes are coated with silica particles as a clot activator. See similar questions...

What is the purpose of the gel in BD Vacutainer® SST™ Serum Separation Tubes?

BD Vacutainer Blood and Urine Collection- FAQs
The gel forms a physical barrier between serum or plasma and blood cells during centrifugation. It is important to note that after collection, BD Vacutainer® SST™ Serum Separation Tubes should be inverted five times, allowed 30 minutes clotting time, and centrifuged for 10 minutes at 1000-1300 RCF (g) in a swing bucket centrifuge. See similar questions...

Why should I bank my babies Cord Blood?

Cord Blood FAQs - WikiFAQ - Answers to Frequently Asked Ques...
of people who need bone marrow transplants can not find a match. Finding a proper match is especially problematic for African-Americans, Hispanics, Native Americans, and people of mixed ethnicity. By banking your baby's stem cells, the odds of having a proper match for the baby or another family member improve. See similar questions...

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