Originally Posted by AubreySLPN
Ok - this is a really silly question. First - I have to set the scene for you.
I was drawing an APTT level for a fellow nurse today. I know that if you have to draw blood from the arm in which an IV is infusing, that you traditionally stop the IV for a few minutes and then draw. The arm in which the IV was not infusing had an unstable blood clot.
Anyways - the pt's heparin was infusing into the arm in which the APTT needed to be drawn. Mind you - this was a BASELINE APTT in which the fellow nurse had forgotten to draw. I did not stop the heparin because I was drawing at a spot which was distal to the IV infusing the heparin. These two nurses made a huge deal of it - because a critical APTT of 130 was reported. They informed me that I should have stopped the heparin for 2-3 minutes; not flushed the site and then drawn the APTT.
However, I feel that I was right because I drew distal to the infusion - in a different vein. I need some opinions as I can't find anything to state that I was incorrect.
Thanks!
Aubrey
Our lab usually has us stop the heparin for a couple of minutes, then they draw--in the other limb, if at all possible. I realize that in your case, it was not possible, so they would've turned it off for a few minutes.
Seems like a really high number for the first draw.