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Samples from patients who have recently eaten may be lipemic
(fatty serum).
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Samples from sick patients may be icteric (jaundice).
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Samples from a patient that struggles during the exam may be
hemolytic (red-tinged serum).
The following diagram shows how VetTest dry-slide chemistry slides
are designed with a unique filtering layer to minimise the effects of
these interfering substances.
Patient sample is applied to the top of the spreading layer.
The layered dry-slide design filters out substances that can interfere
with results, providing greater accuracy.

Blood samples containing these interfering substances can
effect results, and are more common than you may think. In
fact, a recent study showed that as many as 75% of blood samples in
veterinary medicine can be affected by interfering substances.*
That is why it is essential for your chemistry analyser to provide accurate
resultseven when samples are compromised.
Over 50 million patients have been tested to date using the
IDEXX VetTest, making this technology the most preferred,
proven chemistry method when veterinary teams want uncompromising
accuracy for the best patient care.
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