Effects of time and temperature on blood gas and electrolytes in equine venous blood

José Dantas Ribeiro Filho, Paulo Vinícius de Morais Santos, Samuel Rodrigues Alves, Lorena Chaves Monteiro, Caio Monteiro Costa, Rinaldo Batista Viana, Marcel Ferreira Bastos Avanza, Waleska de Melo Ferreira Dantas, Micheline Ozana da Silva

Effects of time and temperature on blood gas and electrolytes in equine venous blood

Číslo: 3/2020
Periodikum: Acta Veterinaria Brno
DOI: 10.2754/avb202089030239

Klíčová slova: Horse, acid–base, conservation, metabolism, samples

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Anotace: This study aimed to evaluate the viability time of horse venous blood samples kept at laboratory temperature (LT) and in water with ice (WI), to perform blood gas analysis. Eleven blood samples were collected in duplicates from 10 healthy horses. The samples were transported to the laboratory and subjected to one of the 24 h storage method. Each pair of syringes was distinctly kept at LT or submerged in WI. Blood gas tests were performed at times T0h, T1h, T2h, T3h, T4h, T5h, T6h, T8h, T10h, T12h and T24h after collection. Analyses of electrolytes were also performed from the same samples. A difference in blood pH was found between the treatments (P < 0.05). From T4h, pH decreased in samples kept at LT, but in WI, pH did not change. For partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2), a difference between treatments (P < 0.05) was noted starting at T8h. In samples kept at LT, pCO2 increased; no changes occurred in samples stored in WI. There was a decrease in the base concentration beginning at T5h in samples kept at LT (P < 0.05), but no variation in samples kept in WI. These changes can be attributed to the erythrocyte metabolism, still active in vitro, which generates lactic acid from anaerobic glycolysis. The potassium concentration increased in samples kept in WI from T4h, with a gradual increase until T24h. Conservation of equine venous blood samples in WI is efficient in reducing cellular metabolism, thereby increasing the viability of samples for examination and interpretation of results.