Hematology 425 PB Smear Examination

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The morphology of Blood cells
Advertisements

Reticulocyte Count.
CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Clinical Textbook for Veterinary Technicians by Dennis M. Mccurnin 4th edition Saunders.
© 2014 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or distribution in any manner.
Romanowsky stains and Artefacts in blood films
PERIPHERAL BLOOD SMEAR
Malaria Blood Smear Remains the gold standard for diagnosis Giemsa stain distinguishes between species and life cycle stages parasitemia is quantifiable.
LS/MW MT 417 – Clinical Hematology II Manual/Special Tests Unit Leukocyte Alkaline Phosphatase Exercise LAP Questions KEY.
Week 6: Cell Morphology Wright stain RBC morphology Anisocytosis
-Automation blood count -Red and White blood count and differential count (Manual blood count) Prepared by: Mona alharbi Experiment:
CLINICAL PATHOLOGY WORKSHEET Collection Information Type of Restraint: Phys. Chemical Behav. Date of Collection: Day______ Mo_______Yr______ Time of Collection:________:_________.
-Automation blood count -Red and White blood count and differential count (Manual blood count) Experiment:
BIOT 309: BLOOD SMEAR PRACTICAL
Packed Cell Volumes Total Proteins and Blood Films Laboratory Procedures.
Chapter 41 Hematology.
Human Anatomy and Physiology Lab 1 Blood. Background: I. Blood is a connective tissue composed of formed elements (cells and cellfragments) and intercellular.
Common Laboratory Tests. Let’s look at some nuances of 3 of most commonly ordered lab tests CBC (Complete Blood Count) BMP (Basic Metabolic Panel) Coagulation.
Pictures/Diagrams Copyright © University of Nebraska
Complete Blood Count.
THE BASIS OF HEMATOLOGICAL DIAGNOSTICS Marustchak M.I.
Practical Clinical Hematology Fetal Hemoglobin ALKALI DENATURATION By: Wael Al Laithi.
Peripheral blood Practical lesson WS 10 – group 1051 Teacher: Tomáš Kučera.
Practical Hematology Lab
PERIPHERAL BLOOD SMEAR
White Blood Cell Differential Count
Performing a Reticulocyte Count. Reticulocytes A reticulocyte is an immature RBC that still has remnants of RNA in the RBC’s cytoplasm. A reticulocyte.
Practical Hematology Lab
MOLECULAR IMMUNOLOGY BLOOD CELLS March 1, BLOOD Connective tissue Amount: – 1/12th of body weight – 5-6 liters Content: – 55% plasma = liquid –
Preparing a Blood Smear. Samples for Hematology Capillary blood and venous blood can be used for hematology tests. Capillary blood is beneficial if a.
Preparation of Blood Films
Nada Mohamed Ahmed, MSC, MT (ASCP)i. Preparation of Blood Films Values: To study morphology of RBC. To study morphology of WBC. To study morphology of.
Complete Blood Count (CBC)
Packed Cell Volumes Total Proteins Blood Smear Prep.
Week Four Hematology/CBC/Leukocytes
Blood smear A. Nada AL-Juaid.
Human Anatomy and Physiology Lab 1 Blood. Background: I. Blood is a connective tissue composed of formed elements (cells and cellfragments) and intercellular.
Preparation of blood film Dalia Kamal Eldien MSc in microbiology Practical NO-4-
Human Anatomy and Physiology
Puncturing the Skin to Obtain Capillary Blood
Practical Hematology Lab
Human Anatomy and Physiology
Red Blood Cells Erythrocytes (RBC’s).
White Blood Cell Differential Count
Human Anatomy and Physiology
Preparation of Staining & examination of blood film
Practical Hematology Lab
The Differential Leukocyte Count (DLC)
A peripheral blood smear
Blood Smear Examination
Chapter 12 Additional Hematologic Tests
Practical Hematology Lab
Blood.
Hematology 425 Hematopoiesis
The morphology of Blood cells
Exercise 34 Blood.
Mr. Mohammed A. Jaber Blood Film.
Introduction To Medical Technology
Lecture 3 PBS Reticulocyte.
Fish Heath Management Lab 3: Hematology
Blood Smear Examination
Case Study #2 Hematology.
Blood smear examination.
Hematology and Coagulation Procedures
The Differential Leukocyte Count (DLC)
Circulatory System BLOOD Blood vessels Heart lymph vessels
Chapter 41 Hematology.
The morphology of Blood cells
Chapter 41 Hematology.
Complete Blood Count (CBC)
Blood smear examination
Presentation transcript:

Hematology 425 PB Smear Examination Russ Morrison October 20, 2006 11/20/2018

PB Smear The well-made, well-stained blood smear can provide valuable information More can be learned from this procedure than any other single hematologic test WBC and platelet counts can be estimated Proportions of different types of WBCs can be observed Morphology of the three circulating cell lines (RBC, WBC, platelet) can be evaluated for abnormalities 11/20/2018

PB Smear Preparation EDTA-anticoagulated blood is collected in a purple top tube EDTA anticoagulates the blood by chelating calcium required for coagulation Smears should be prepared within 2 to 3 hours of collection the EDTA anticoagulated sample Blood more than 5 hours old shows RBC artifact (echinocyte, spherocyte, necrobiotic leukocytes, vacuolated neutrophils and monocytes) 11/20/2018

PB Smear Preparation Advantage of making smears from a tube of blood is that multiple slides can be made and the timing of slide making can be postponed Platelet estimates are more accurated when anticoagulated blood is used to prepare the smear Some still believe that direct preparation of smears is best to evaluate blood cells and their morphology 11/20/2018

PB Smear Preparation EDTA can be a source of error Platelet satellitosis can cause a pseudothrombocytopenia Platelet clumping can cause low platelet and increased WBC dounts These problems may be eliminated using sodium citrate as an anticoagulant 11/20/2018

Platelet satellitosis, (platelets encircling a neutrophil) occurs when a patient has a serum factor that reacts to the anticoagulant EDTA 11/20/2018

PB Smear Preparation PB smears may also be made directly from finger or heel punctures at the patient’s side. Limitations of direct prep Platelet clumping can be expected Limited number of smears can be made 11/20/2018

PB Smear Preparation Techniques for making PB Smears Manual wedge technique Coverslip technique Automated slide maker Regardless of method, smears should be dired quickly to avoid drying artifact (moth-eaten looking red cells) 11/20/2018

Staining of PB Smears Ronamowsky Stains such as Wright’s or Wright-Giemsa stain are most often used They are polychrome stains because both eosin and methylene blue are used Methanol in the slide fixes the cells to the slide A buffer facilitates the staining action Staining reactions are pH-dependent 11/20/2018

Staining of PB Smears Methylene blue is basic and stains acidic cellular components such as RNA Eosin is acidic and stains basic components such as Hgb or eosiniphilic granules Slides may be stained manually or with automated stainers 11/20/2018

PB Smear Examination 10X or Low Power Assess the overall quality of the smear, including abnormal distribution of RBCs, agglutination or a disproportionate number of large nucleated cells at the edge of the smear. If any of the above conditions exist, a new smear should be prepared. While scanning with this lens, check to see if abnormal cells such as blasts, reactive lymphs or parasites are present. Also check for clumps of platelets which may indicate inadequate anticoagulation of the sample (partial clotting). 11/20/2018

PB Smear Examination 40X or High Dry Using the 40X (high dry) objective, find an area of the smear in which the RBCs are evenly distributed and barely touch one another. Scan 8 to 10 fields in this area of the smear and determine the average number of white blood cells (WBCs) per field. The average number of WBCs per high power field multiplied by 2000 gives an approximation of the total WBC count/mm3. Discrepancies between the WBC estimate and the machine count should be resolved. 11/20/2018

PB Smear Examination 100X or Oil Immersion In the same area of the smear as used for 40X review, perform the WBC differential. Count 100 consecutive WBCs in a systematic manner using the “battlement” track (Figure 1-6) of the Hematology atlas. Results are reported as a % for each type of cell seen during the differential. NRBCs are also counted during the differential, if seen, and reported as # NRBCs/100 WBCs. Evaluate the RBC morphology in relation to size, shape and color of the RBCs on the smear. Results of the RBC evaluation should be consistent with the indices reported by the hematology instrumentation. 11/20/2018

PB Smear Examination 100X or Oil Immersion The final step with the 100x objective is to estimate the platelet count. In the same area where the differential was performed, count the number of platelets in 10 oil immersion fields. The average number of platelets in those 10 fields multiplied by 20,000 will provide an estimate of the platelet count which should match the automated count within reason. The platelet estimate is reported as decreased, adequate or increased (using 150 to 450 x 103/ul as the reference range). 11/20/2018

PB Smear Examination Platelet number is reported as adequate, increased or decreased RBC morphology is evaluated in regard to presence of anisocytosis and poikilocytosis Anisocytosis is quantitated when greater than normal, poikilocytosis is quantitated and the poikilocytes present are identified 11/20/2018