DO NOT USE - ALL INFORMATION LIKELY INCORRECT IF NOT ACTIVELY DANGEROUS
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
INDICATIONS
- Systemic signs indicate bloodstream infection
- systemic inflammatory response syndrome, severe sepsis or septic shock
- rigors or new confusion with or without evidence of localised infection
- Patients with severe sepsis, especially the elderly or immunocompromised, may not have a fever
- do not restrict blood culture specimens to patients who 'spike a fever' (>38°C)
- If secondary infection with a new pathogen suspected or if antimicrobials seem ineffective, repeat blood cultures
How many sets?
- Collect blood culture specimens before starting antimicrobial drugs
Sepsis
- 2 sets of blood culture specimens in first hour before starting antimicrobials
- remember to start empiric antibiotic treatment immediately after blood cultures are taken
Suspected endocarditis
- 3 sets of blood culture specimens at different times in 24 hr
- interval depending on the urgency to start empiric antibiotic treatment (e.g. SBE: 8 hr; acute IE: 20 min). See Infective endocarditis guideline
EQUIPMENT
- Hand wash
- Disposable apron
- Gloves
- Disposable tourniquet
- Injection tray (blue plastic tray)
- 3 Clinell® cleansing wipes (2% chlorhexidine in 70% isopropyl alcohol)
- 1 for skin and 1 for each top of blood culture bottles
- Clean gauze
- Sticking plaster/tape
- Pen to mark the bottles /sign the form
- Sharps bin
- Microbiology laboratory request form - completed with patient's details and tests required
Blood collection equipment
- Blood culture bottles
- each set of blood cultures comprises 2 bottles - 1 aerobic and 1 anaerobic (labelled)
- If available, use vacuum-assisted blood collection system to reduce risk of needle-stick injury
- One winged butterfly with extension tube to draw blood directly into blood culture bottles
- check each blood culture bottle marked for 10 mL volume to ensure correct amount of blood goes into bottle
- If venous access difficult, use a minimum 20 mL sterile syringe and needle to obtain sample and inoculate blood culture bottles using the same needle
- If IV central line present, obtain blood culture from both peripheral venous access and central line
- In rare instances, where no peripheral venous access available, sample from IV central line(s) only
- use a syringe for drawing blood
- attach a sterile needle to inoculate blood sample into blood culture bottles
PREPARATION
- If not competent in procedure, organise supervision by a clinician experienced in the procedure
Patient
- Consider any pre-existing medical condition and current medication
Consent
- Identify patient
- Explain procedure
- Obtain and record consent - see Consent guideline
Collect equipment
- Take equipment (listed above) to patient’s bedside
Procedure
- Wash hands with soap and water and dry with disposable paper towel. See Hand hygiene guideline
- Put on apron
Prepare blood culture bottles
- Check expiry date
- If using winged butterfly system, to avoid false positive results, check each bottle is marked to ensure 10 mL of blood not exceeded
- Flip off plastic lids
- Use a Clinell® wipe to clean septum of each bottle
- allow alcohol to fully evaporate/dry before inoculation of blood
Select sampling site
- Select venepuncture site
- percutaneous peripheral vein (non-cannula) blood samples are the best source of contamination-free cultures
- use femoral vein only if venepuncture not possible at other sites
- use cannula (e.g. arterial line, central line) samples for blood culture ONLY when no other option or for evaluation of line sepsis
- Inspect and palpate the site without or with tourniquet
- if tourniquet applied, remove it and re-apply when commencing procedure
Prepare skin
- Cleanse hands
- Put on gloves
- Apply disposable tourniquet
- Cleanse patient’s skin with cleansing wipe from blood culture pack following manufacturer’s instructions
- up/down and side to side over intended puncture site for a minimum of 30 sec
- allow to dry for a minimum of 30 sec to kill bacteria on the skin
- Do NOT palpate the vein again after skin cleansing
Prepare equipment
- Vacutainer® [winged needle with extension tube (butterfly)] with extension tube and vacutainer needle holder attached is the preferred and safest method
- secondary choice is syringe and needle method
- Remove sheath from needle
DRAWING/TRANSFER OF BLOOD
- Fill blood culture bottles first before collecting blood samples for any other tests
- reduces risk of contamination from non-sterile containers
Safety needle (straight or butterfly)
- Ensure bevel edge of needle is in upward position
- Anchor the vein by applying manual traction a few centimetres below proposed needle insertion site. Take care not to touch the needle
- Insert needle smoothly at approximately 30° angle
Using vacutainer
- Ensure vacutainer set is stabilised and held safely
- Draw 8-10 mL of blood directly into aerobic bottle first, followed by 8-10 mL into anaerobic bottle
- avoids exchange of air from vacutainer extension line into anaerobic bottle
- If sample insufficient, put 8-10mL of blood into the aerobic bottle and rest into the anaerobic bottle
- 98% of septicaemias are caused by aerobic or anaerobic organisms that can tolerate aerobic environments, but an inadequate sample can give a false negative result
- Take any other blood tests required
Using syringe
- Draw a minimum of 20mL blood into the syringe
- Transfer blood from syringe and needle, 8-10 mL of blood directly into aerobic bottle first, followed 8-10 mL into anaerobic bottle
- With remaining blood sample, fill the other blood bottles for additional tests
After blood collection
- Remove/release tourniquet
- Remove needle, dispose immediately into the sharps bin
- Apply pressure with gauze to puncture site
- If still oozing, apply hypoallergenic sticking tape over the sterile gauze
FINISH
- Remove and safely dispose of sharps and equipment
- Remove apron and gloves
- Wash hands
Label and sign
- Blood culture bottles immediately at bedside
- patient name, NHS number and/or hospital number, date of birth, date and time sample taken, ward and consultant
- Sign label
- Remove any peel-off bar code labels from blood culture bottles and affix to lab request form
- do not stick any labels over remaining bar codes on blood culture bottles
- Complete pathology request form
- clinical data and details of antimicrobial therapy, date, time and site of sample, patient name, NHS number and/or hospital number
- Sign form
- Document in patient's medical records date / time and samples taken, note bar codes
Transport
- Place bottles in microbiology request bag with completed laboratory request form with blood culture unique identifier attached
- If plastic bottles, send by pneumatic tube system if available
- If glass bottles, arrange transport of sample to microbiology laboratory
- if there is likely to be a delay in transporting samples, keep the bottles at room temperature
- Document in medical records, indication for sample, and that blood cultures have been taken, include:
- time and date sample taken and sent
- blood culture bottle bar codes
- sample site
- name and signature of person who took sample
Advice
- For treatment of sepsis, see Sepsis management guideline
- For clinical advice on a septic patient, contact duty consultant microbiologist
Last reviewed: 2024-02-18