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Phlebotomy Exam Prep 15, Sodium Fluoride (Gray) Tube — Glucose Preservation
Published 2 weeks, 3 days ago
Description
This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams.
In this episode you will learn:
- The gray top tube contains two key additives: sodium fluoride as an antiglycolytic agent and potassium oxalate as an anticoagulant.
- Sodium fluoride's primary role is to preserve glucose by stopping glycolysis, the process where blood cells break down sugar.
- This tube is essential for tests requiring highly accurate glucose levels, such as glucose tolerance tests (GTT), lactate, and blood alcohol levels.
- A common exam trap is confusing the additives; sodium fluoride preserves the sample, while potassium oxalate prevents clotting.
- If sample analysis is delayed, a gray top tube provides a more accurate glucose value than a green top (heparin) tube because it prevents the glucose level from falsely decreasing.
For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep