Abstract
Commercially available capillaries containing calcium-titrated heparinate as an anticoagulant designed specifically for ionized calcium measurements in blood were tested with four serum pools with ionized calcium concentrations adjusted to 0·75, 1·25, 1·50 and 2·50 mmol/L. Although this is the best available anticoagulant for this purpose, the use of these capillaries induced a ±1% alteration of the original concentration around the titration level and changes of −2 to + 10% at pathological values. The amount of heparinate released exceeded the recommended limit of 50 IU/mL of specimen with some variability (6% to 20%). Increasing the amount of anticoagulant with the objective of avoiding magnetic mixing did not seem to be a valid approach. Finally, Radiometer, IL and AVL capillaries gave the best available and acceptable results in terms of alterations in ionized calcium.
