Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (immunodeficiency)
71,517 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This study compared the levels of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) virion RNA in plasma from whole blood collected in VACUTAINER CPT (cell preparation tube), VACUTAINER PPT (plasma preparation tube), VACUTAINER SST (serum separation tube), and standard VACUTAINER tubes with sodium heparin, acid citrate dextrose, sodium citrate, and potassium EDTA used as anticoagulants. Quantitative plasma HIV RNA levels were measured by branched-DNA signal amplification. Blood from all tubes was either processed within 1 to 3 h after collection or stored at room temperature or at 4 degrees C for analysis at 6 to 8 and 30 h postdraw. Immediately separated plasma from sodium citrate CPT tubes held at 4 degrees C maintained better stability of HIV RNA equivalents than whole blood held at room temperature or 4 degrees C. The highest number of HIV RNA equivalents was seen with EDTA VACUTAINER tubes. HIV RNA equivalents in all types of plasma were significantly higher than in SST tubes. Although a decline in HIV RNA equivalents was seen in all collection devices after 30 h, a significantly greater decline in plasma HIV RNA equivalents occurred in acid citrate dextrose VACUTAINER tubes than in citrate CPT, PPT, and standard EDTA VACUTAINER tubes. In order to minimize the variability of quantitative HIV RNA test results, our data suggest that samples collected for a particular assay should be processed at the same time postdraw using a particular tube type throughout a given study.
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PMID:Comparative stabilities of quantitative human immunodeficiency virus RNA in plasma from samples collected in VACUTAINER CPT, VACUTAINER PPT, and standard VACUTAINER tubes. 765 Jan 87

Minimizing the risk for infection to laboratory staff from a contaminated blood sample is a major safety goal in the clinical laboratory. One dangerous pathogen, the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), can be deactivated by heating sera at 56 degrees C for 30 minutes. The authors previously reported that if serum was subjected to those conditions, the concentrations of the nine most commonly monitored drugs were not altered, whereas phenytoin and carbamazepine concentrations were reduced slightly. Monitoring free phenytoin, free valproic acid, and free carbamazepine concentrations is strongly recommended for patients with uremia, liver disease, and hypoalbuminemia. Because drug protein binding can be affected by temperature, the authors investigated the effect on free drug concentrations of sera heated to levels necessary for deactivation of the HIV virus. They measured total and free drug concentrations in serum pools prepared from patients receiving phenytoin, valproic acid, and carbamazepine. Serum pools were heated at 56 degrees C for 30 minutes and then brought to room temperature. The total and free drug concentrations were measured immediately after heating and then at 20- and 45-minute intervals. The concentrations of free phenytoin and free valproic acid were significantly higher after heat treatment. However, after equilibration of sera at room temperature for 20 minutes, the free concentrations of phenytoin were comparable to preheating values, although total phenytoin concentrations (Serum Separator Tubes) were reduced slightly. In contrast, free valproic acid concentrations did not return to the original levels even after 45 minutes. Free carbamazepine concentrations did not change even immediately after heating. However, total carbamazepine concentrations were reduced slightly when sera were heated in serum separator tubes (SST Tubes).
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PMID:Effect of heating human sera at a temperature necessary to deactivate human immunodeficiency virus on measurement of free phenytoin, free valproic acid, and free carbamazepine concentrations. 1044 96