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Blood Collection via Capillary Puncture in Infants
The areas of the bottom surface of the newborn's heel contain the best capillary bed and provide protection against damaging the calcaneus. Therefore a heelstick is the preferred method to collect a blood sample from neonates and infants under 6 months of age because their fingers are too small). When choosing the puncture site care should be taken not to select a site that has previously (recently) been punctured.
The puncture should be made on the flat bottom surface of the foot, not on the posterior curvature of the heel where the heel bone (calcaneus) is very close to the skin surface. Sticking an infant straight into the medial aspect of the back of the heel could cause damage to nerves, the bone, or infection to this sensitive area.
The National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards (NCCLS) recently made a change in the standards regarding heel sticks in infants. The depth of an infants heel skin puncture should not exceed 2 mm to avoid hitting a bone (changed from 2.4 mm). Beside protecting the calcaneus, this depth is adequate to reach the capillary beds and provide sufficient blood flow to collect the sample. Most experts warn specifically against the use of a surgical blade of any kind for heelstick because of the danger of a deep puncture, infection, and damage to the infant's calcaneus.A wide variety of lancets are available for capillary puncture. Unfortunately, none are exactly the right length and width to provide a puncture of 2 mm deep and 2.0-2.5 mm in length for a heelstick. Therefore, most experts recommend use of lancets of the correct length which are designed with guards to prevent deep punctures, although in most the width of the lancet is not ideal either. One lancet, however, designed for heel sticks on infants and premature babies that is exemplary for safety and ease of use is the BD Quikheel™ Safety Lancet. You can read usage tips and view a video here!
Preparation of the heelstick site and drawing should proceed as follows:
The equipment needed for the heelstick is a sterile 2 mm lancet, sterile alcohol prep, sterile gauze pads, soft cloth, blood collection form, blood collection tube or dry blood spot paper, gloves. Do not contaminate filter paper circles by touching them or by spilling liquids on them before or after blood collection.
skin surface.
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