Blood Serum
In an urgent situation, or if a patient is unable to provide urine for the test, blood serum can be used in the test kit
This is an imperfect solution, because the forms of HCG (pregnancy hormone) found in serum are somewhat different from the forms found in urine.
Further, the serum proteins tend to sludge up the test kit, both mechanically and biochemically. That said, using serum instead of urine will work well enough for most purposes and can provide immediate insight into the patient's problem.
- Draw blood into a test tube.
- Tape the test tube to the wall for about 10 minutes (allow it to clot).
- Using an eye dropper or a syringe with a needle, draw off a small amount of serum (the clear, watery part of the blood that's left at the top of the test tube after the blood has clotted).
- Use the serum instead of urine in the urine pregnancy test kit, drop for drop. If the test kit calls for 4 drops of urine, use 4 drops of serum.
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