• Title/Summary/Keyword: Vacuum assisted auto-lancing device

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Pain and Blood Volume with Different Sampling Sites and Puncture Depths in Vacuum Assisted Auto Lancing Technique for Blood Glucose Test (혈당검사를 위한 진공자동채혈기법사용시 채혈부위와 바늘침투깊이에 따른 통증과 채혈량 분석)

  • Park, Mi-Sook;Park, Kyung-Soon;Kim, Kyung-Ah;Cha, Young-Joo;Jun, Myung-Hee;Kim, Tae-Im;Lee, Tae-Soo;Cha, Eun-Jong
    • The Journal of Korean Academic Society of Nursing Education
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.265-271
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    • 2006
  • Purpose: To analyze the newly developed vacuum assisted auto-lancing technique applied to the forearm for the purpose of obtaining an adequate blood sample for glucose test with minimal pain. Methods: Visual and facial pain measures were introduced to compare lancing pain between the forearm and fingertip in 58 normal females. Sampled blood volumes were accurately measured by computer scanning technique. Results: Visual pain measure demonstrated significant pain reduction effect of the forearm sampling compared with the traditional fingertip sampling, which was also consistent with facial pain measure results. Blood volume more than $0.5{\mu}L$, enough for blood glucose testing with modern glucometers, was collected in 399(86%) of 464 forearm samples. Conclusions: Capillary blood sampling could be performed with minimal pain on the forearm by the newly developed vacuum assisted auto-lancing technique. With some resampling when necessary, the forearm sampling seemed very useful, considering almost no pain felt by the patients.

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Vacuum Assisted Auto-Lancing Technique for Capillary Blood Sampling on the Forearm with Minimized Pain (전완부위 최소통증 채혈을 위한 진공 자동 채혈기법)

  • Park Mi Sook;Park Kyung Soon;Kim Kyung Ah;Jun Myung Hee;Kim Tae Im;Lee Tae Soo;Cha Eun Jong
    • Journal of Biomedical Engineering Research
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    • v.25 no.6
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    • pp.557-563
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    • 2004
  • A new vacuum assisted auto-lancing technique is proposed to minimize pain. Specially designed lancing device was introduced, which applied -100mmHg right after skin puncture on the forearm. Sampled blood volumes were measured in 58 normal females. Mean volume of 464 samples was approximately 2.6$\muL$ and the frequency of more than 0.5$\muL$ was 86%. Thus the success rate of blood sugar test should also be the same when using modern glucose meters capable of testing with only 0.3~0.5$\muL$ of capillary blood. When pain scores were quantitatively evaluated by the visual pain measure, only 23% pain of the traditional finger sampling was experienced, demonstrating that capillary blood sampling was performed on the forearm with almost no pain. The present technique reduced pain to a great degree, though resampling might be unavoidable due to 14% of test failure rate estimated for modern glucose meters. However, minimized pain makes the present technique of great convenience for diabetic patients who need blood sampling a few times a day.