DEVELOPMENT SITE ONLY
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