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Page 1: 0509 Haemat Lecture

ROUTINE HEMATOLOGICAL ROUTINE HEMATOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONSINVESTIGATIONS

CBC includesCBC includes•Hemoglobin estimationHemoglobin estimation•RBC countRBC count•Packed cell volumePacked cell volume•IndicesIndices•Total WBC countTotal WBC count•Differential WBC countDifferential WBC count•Platelet adequacyPlatelet adequacy

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FULL BLOOD COUNT

OTHER INVESTIGATIONS

• Erythrocyte sedimentation rate

• Platelet count

• Reticulocyte count.

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HEMATOLOGYHEMATOLOGY

• HAEM - blood LOGOS – study

• Study of formed elements of blood eg. BBC, WBC, Platelets.

• Serum : blood allowed to clot.

Plasma : centrifuge.

Plasma has FIBRINOGEN but serum does not.

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COLLECTION OF BLOODCOLLECTION OF BLOOD

• Skin puncture / Capillary blood

Eg. ear, heel etc.• Venous blood.

ANTICOAGULANTS - prevent blood from clotting

EDTA - Ethylene diamine tetra acetic acid.• Best for platelets.

Oxalates - Ammonium & Potassium Oxalate 3:2.

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Tri Sodium Citrate : ESR 1:4, BB 1:9, liquid.

Sodium Fluoride : Sugar estimation .Inhibits glycolysis.

Heparin : Liquid, in- vivo also, expensive. Bluish background, rouleaux. Osmotic Fragility test.

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BLOOD COLLECTION APPARATUSBLOOD COLLECTION APPARATUS

VACUTAINERS (Becton Dickinson) B.D.

• Needle, needle holder, glass / plastic vacuum.

• Vacuum tube instead of syringe barrel.

• Single use, quicker, cleaner, safer.

• Microtainers – infants for skin puncture.

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COLOUR CODE OF STOPPER OF COLOUR CODE OF STOPPER OF VACUTAINER.VACUTAINER.

Oxalate – blue

EDTA – lavender

Citrate – blue/ yellow

Heparin – green

Fluoride – grey

No anticoagulant – red

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HEMOGLOBINOMETRYHEMOGLOBINOMETRY

• Colorimetric methods.

• Gasometric methods / Van Slyke method.

• Specific Gravity method.

• Chemical methods. (obsolete).

1 gm of Hb holds 1.34 ml oxygen.

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COLORIMETRIC METHODSCOLORIMETRIC METHODS

Principle : Hb is converted into acid hematin, alkali hematin, cyanmethhb, oxyhb, carboxyhb etc. Colour of the compound produced compared with glass standards / other standards in a photocolorimeter. eg. Sahlis method

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SAHLIS METHOD : Based on the conversion of Hb to acid hematin which has a brown color & compared with the standard plates.

CYANMETHHEMOGLOBIN METHOD :Principle : Whole blood (5ml) is taken & mixed with

Drabkin’s soln. (20ul) - Potassium cyanide & Potassium Ferricyanide. ---- chemical product formed of stable colour - Cyanmethhb.

Method approved By International Committee for Standardization in Hematology.

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CYANMETHHEMOGLOBIN METHOD CYANMETHHEMOGLOBIN METHOD (CONTD)(CONTD)

• Intensity of colour is proportional to Hb. conc. & obeys Beer’s law.

• Absorbance of the soln. is measured in a photoelectric colorimeter at 540 nm.

• NB : Drabkins soln. to be made once a month & stored in dark colored bottles.

• Highly poisonous & never be mouth pipetted.

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Advantages of CyanmethHb methodAdvantages of CyanmethHb method

• Readings need not be taken immediately after dilution as the colour is stable.

• Almost all forms of HB. (except sulfHb) are converted to cyanmethHb.

• Method is accurately standardizable.• Soln. of cyanmeth is very stable.• Drabkin’s soln. can be preserved for many

months.

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Disadv.of Sahlis Method.Disadv.of Sahlis Method.

• Complete conversion to acid hematin takes 1 hour - impractical. Results taken after 10 mins.

• Color development is not stable & starts fading immediately after the peak.

• Glass used for comparison is not satisfactory.

• Carboxy, meth, sulphb cannot be converted to acid hematin (not all hb.).

Adv of Sahlis methodCheap, simple to perform, quick, reagents easily available.

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TOTAL WBC COUNTTOTAL WBC COUNT

• Blood diluted with acid to remove RBC by hemolysis. Nuclei of WBC is accentuated by acid.

• Count on Neubauers chamber, 10x.• Diluting Fluid : Glacial acetic acid, methylene blue.• Calculation : No. of WBC x dilution /Area counted x

depth of fluid.• Dilution = 20. • Area counted = 4x1 sqmm=4sq mm.• Depth of fluid = 0.1mm (constant).• FACTOR = 20/4 x 0.1 = 50.• Unit = cu mm.

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TOTAL WBC COUNTTOTAL WBC COUNT

• N : 4000 – 11000 / cmm.

• Increased – Leucocytosis.

• Decreased – Leukopenia.

• WBC pipette uses : CSF, Body fluids, Sperm counts.

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HEMATOCRIT / P.C.VHEMATOCRIT / P.C.V..

• Defn : amount of RBC’s following centrifugation and is expressed as % of the total volume of blood.

• Reasonable index of RBC population & good to detect anemias.

• Method – Microhematocrit, Macrohematocrit --- Wintrobes & Westergren

methods.

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WINTROBE’S METHODWINTROBE’S METHOD

• Anticoagulant : oxalate.• Take blood up to mark. Centrifuge.• Read on the graduation mark on the tube.• 110 x 3 mm tube.• 1 ml blood.• 3000 rpm x 30 min.• Layers : RBC – red, WBC – grey, Platelet

– creamy, plasma – straw coloured.

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MICROHEMATOCRIT METHODMICROHEMATOCRIT METHOD

• Anticoagulated blood is centrifuged in sealed capillary tubes.

• Volume of packed cells to % of whole blood determined by hematocrit reader.

• Tube 7mm long. Bore 1mm.• Venepuncture samples- plain capillary tubes.• Skin puncture – Heparinised capillary tubes.• 12,000 rpm x 3min.

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MICROHEMATOCRIT METHOD ( contd.)MICROHEMATOCRIT METHOD ( contd.)

• Suitable for small volume specimens.

• Requires disposable capillary tubes, special centrifuge, reading device cost.

• N : M = 42 - 52; F 36 - 48%.

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ERYTHROCYTE ERYTHROCYTE SEDIMENTATION RATESEDIMENTATION RATE

• DEFN : When whole blood is allowed to settle, sedimentation of the RBC’s will occur and the rate at which the RBC’s fall is the ESR.

• Non specific test which reflects changes in plasma protein which accompany both acute & chronic infections.

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ERYTHROCYTE SEDIMENTATION ERYTHROCYTE SEDIMENTATION RATE (contd)RATE (contd)

• Methods : Westergren’s method. Wintrobe’s method. Zeta sedimentation rate. Micro ESR method.• Anticoagulant : Westergren – Na citrate 1:4 Wintrobe – Oxalate.• N Values : Westergren 5 – 15; 5 - 20. Wintrobe 0 – 10; 0 - 20.• Units mm / hr.

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ESR (contd)ESR (contd)

• Westergren - more accurate .

• Wintrobe - PCV can be done later.

Stages of ESR.

• Stage of rouleaux formation – 10 min.

• Stage of fast settling – 40 min.

• Period of packing – 10 min.

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ESR ( contd)ESR ( contd)

Increased ESR• old age, pregnancy.• anemias.• chronic diseases – TB, RA.• collagen vascular disease.• neoplastic dis. • DD of angina from MI.• multiple myeloma.

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HEMOCYTOMETRYHEMOCYTOMETRYEnnumeration of the formed elements of blood.Ennumeration of the formed elements of blood.

• Manual methods.• Automated Methods of blood cell counting

- Electrometric system, Photometric system.

Automatic:• accurate, reliable, faster, more information in

some parameters than manual methods.• Difficulty in differentiating betn. diff. types of

WBC’s.

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PRINCIPLES OF BLOOD CELL PRINCIPLES OF BLOOD CELL COUNTERCOUNTER

• Blood cells suspended in an electrolyte soln.

• Flow : outer chamber – inner chamber.

• 100 u orifice.

• Electrode in each chamber to sense the current flowing thr’ the orifice.

• As cell passes - imparts resistance to electrical conductivity betn. 2 chambers.

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PRINCIPLES OF BLOOD CELL COUNTER PRINCIPLES OF BLOOD CELL COUNTER (contd.)(contd.)

• Resistance measured as voltage pulse which corresponds to the counting of each cell --- Number.

• Degree of resistance is proportional to the volume of the cell --- size of cell obtained.

• 7 to 18 parameters.

• Measured / calculated.

• HB, PCV, RBC count WBC count, Indices.

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BLOOD CELL INDICESBLOOD CELL INDICES..

MCV = average volume of the BBC’s.• MCV = PCVx10 / RBC count in millions.• Unit = Femtolitres.

MCH = Average Hb content by weight of a RBC.

• MCH = Hb x 10 / RBC count in millions.• Unit = picograms.

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MCHC = average Hb. conc. per unit volume of RBC.

• MCHC = MCH / MCV x 100 or Hb / PCV x 100.

• Unit = %.

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PLATELET COUNTPLATELET COUNT

• Smallest cell in circulation.• N values : 1- 3 lakh / cmm.• EDTA – best for platelet count.• Venous blood better than capillary blood –

clumping.

• Methods :-- Manual – Rees Ecker Method, Estimation of platelet - P.S.

-- Automated.

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PLATELET COUNT (contd.)PLATELET COUNT (contd.)

Rees - Ecker Fluid 1 : 200 dilution.• Trisodium citrate – prevents clotting.• Neutral Formaldehyde – fixes platelets.• Brilliant Cresyl Blue – colours background.

Neubauers chamber can be used Spencer Brightline chamber – white lines on

a dark background.

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PLATELET COUNT(contd)PLATELET COUNT(contd)

Peripheral Smear• No of platelets in an oil immersion field.Check

out for 10 fields.• N 10 –25 adequate. 0 – 5 inadequate.

• Increased : polycythemia vera, CML, splenectomy.

• Decreased : aplastic anemia, acute leukemia, ITP, megaloblastic anemia, hypersplenism, RT, CT.

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RETICULOCYTE COUNTRETICULOCYTE COUNT

• Juvenile RBC that pass into bloodstream from BM.

• Ribosomal & cyto. Remanants – supravital stains.

• No of retics indicates degree of activity of BM.

• Stains; Brilliant Cresyl Blue, New Methylene Blue – stains RBC’s when living.

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• Absolute Retic count :

Retic count % x RBC count / 100.

• Retic – fine deep violet filaments & granules arranged in a network. RBC’s – pale blue / green.

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PERIPHERAL SMEAR PERIPHERAL SMEAR EXAMINATIONEXAMINATION

• Routine, part of complete blood count.• Cellular components can be examined.• Smear – prepared, dried, fixed, stained &

viewed.• PREPARATION – Thick & thin smear.

Thick : Large drop, 0.5 inch square, printed material.

Thin : angle 30-35%. Proper spreader.

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FIXING OF BLOOD FILMSFIXING OF BLOOD FILMS

• Fixed with methanol ( acetone free) x 1-2 min.

• Wright’s & Leishman stain – no fixation is required. Built–in fixative.

• Prevents hemolysis when the cells come in contact with water.

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STAINING OF BLOOD FILMSSTAINING OF BLOOD FILMS

• ROMANOWSKY’S STAIN – Combination of acidic and basic dyes.

• Wright’s, Leishman’s, Jenner’s, May-Grunwald.• Basic stain - methylene blue, toludine blue.• Acidic stain - eosin, azureI, azureII.• Nuclear material – acidic – stains with basic• Cytoplasm – basic – stains with acidic

component.

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STEPS OF STAININGSTEPS OF STAINING

• Cover slide with stain x 2 mins.

• Add buffered water / neutral distilled water (pH 6.8) x 5-7 mins.

• Mix stain & water with a blow pipe (metallic sheen).

• Wash stain off. Colour – Rose pink tinge (Do not tip the stain off – stain deposits).

• Dry slide upright in a staining rack.

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EXAMINATION OF SMEAREXAMINATION OF SMEAR

• Screen smear under low power.

• Check background color, distribution of cells, quality of cells etc.

• Oil immersion : plain mirror, lift condensor, open iris diaphragm to light.

• Count at 2/3 & 1/3 junction or where RBC’s just overlap.Count in a serpentine fashion.

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QUALITIES OF A GOOD QUALITIES OF A GOOD SMEARSMEAR

• Gradual transition from head – body- tail

• No holes, waves, water artefacts.

• Not extend to the ends of slide.

• Staining - not overstained, understained or stain deposits.

• WBC’s should not be concentrated in the tail.

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INFORMATION OBTAINED ON INFORMATION OBTAINED ON PERIPHERAL SMEARPERIPHERAL SMEAR

RBC SERIES • Size : normocytes, microcytes & macrocytes. • Shape : Normal biconcave shape with central

pallor 1/3.

Poikilocytes - oval shape, pencil shape, tear drop, sickle cells, crenated shape, schistocytes.

• Hemoglobinization : normochromic / hypochromic.

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• Immature forms : polychromatic RBC’s, stippled RBC’s, nucleated RBC’s.

• Inclusions : Howell - Jolly bodies, malarial parasite (trophozoite, schizont, gametocytes).

• Arrangement : Autoagglutination, excess rouleaux formation.

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• WBC SERIES

• Differential WBC count : N, L, E, M, B. Number : normal, increased or decreased.

• Abnormal / immature cells : band cells, leukemic cells.

• Differential counts of the abnormal cells.

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• PLATELETS• Normal 7-25 platelets / oil immersion field.• Size, abnormal forms, clumping function

assessed.• Low platelet count on chamber / counter to

be confirmed on peripheral smear.• PARASITES : Malaria, filaria (Wucheria

Bancrofti), trypanosomiasis, Leishmaniasis.

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NORMAL VALUES ON P.S.NORMAL VALUES ON P.S.

• Neutrophils : 50 - 70%

• Lymphocytes : 20 - 40%

• Eosinophils : 1 - 4%

• Monocyte : 2 - 10%

• Basophils : 0 - 1%

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• POLYCHROMASIA : Bluish tinge of RBC’s. indicates prematurity of red cells / increased no of retics.

• BASOPHILIC STIPPLING : fine purple granules due to aggregates of ribosomes and mitochondria. Rate of production rbcs high - retics released.

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• HOWELL - JOLLY BODIES : small 1-3 u purple – blue round inclusions, remanants of nuclear material in DNA. Severe pernicious anemia, E.F., Thal major, sickle anemia.

• CABOT’S RINGS : stains purple red, loops & figure of 8 structures representing denatured protein / nuclear membrane. Seen in pernicious anemia, lead poisoning.

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ABNORMAL RBC FORMSABNORMAL RBC FORMS

• MACROCYTES - RBC’s > 9 u, MCV > 96 fl. -megaloblastic anemias, liverdiseases, hypothyroidism & alcoholics.

• MICROCYTES - < 6 u, MCV < 76 fl.- iron deficiency anemia, anemia of chronic diseases, thalassemia.

• TARGET CELLS - Thalassemia, iron def. anemia, obstructive jaundice.

• SCHISTOCYTES - red cell fragments in O. intravascular mechanical trauma, microangiopathic hemolysis.

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• ACANTHOCYTES : irregularly spiculated surface - liver disease, abetalipoproteinemia.

• ECHINOCYTES : regularly spiculated surface - bile acid abnormality, high plasma F.F.A.

• SPHEROCYTES : no central pallor. No biconcave shape. MCHC high – hereditary spherocytosis.

• STOMATOCYTES : Slit like area of pallor of rbc’s - liver disease, hereditary defects in membranes.

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ABNORMALITIES OF WBC’SABNORMALITIES OF WBC’S

• Immature forms like blasts & other leukemic cells. AML, ALL, CML, CLL ETC.

• Toxic granules in WBC’s - severe bacterial infection, Chediak - Higashi syndrome.

• Hypersegmented neutrophils - > 5% with 5 lobes or 1 with 6 lobes - megaloblastic anemia.

• Hyposegmented neutrophils : Pelger - Huet abnormality.

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