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Examination of Peripheral Blood Smear
Dr S Homathy
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Complete blood count The most common test used in clinical medicine Determine type and severity of blood cell abnormalities Nowadays, CBC is fully automated and highly reproducible. Correct interpretation of automated CBC can reduce rate of unnecessary blood smear examination Provide useful information for provisional diagnosis of RBC and WBC diseases
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A well Made and well Stained Smear can provide:
Estimates of cell count Proportions of the different types of WBC Morphology
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Preparation of blood smear
There are three types of blood smears: The cover glass smear. The wedge smear . The spun smear. The are two additional types of blood smear used for specific purposes Buffy coat smear for WBCs < 1.0×109/L Thick blood smears for blood parasites .
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Peripheral Blood Smear
Objective 1. Specimen Collection 2. Peripheral Smear Preparation 3. Staining of Peripheral Blood Smear 4. Peripheral Smear Examination
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Specimen Collection Venipuncture
should be collected on an EDTA (Disodium or Tripotassium ethylene diamine tetra-acetic acid) Tube EDTA liquid form preferred over the powdered form Chelates calcium
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Specimen Collection Advantages
Many smears can be done in just a single draw Immediate preparation of the smear is not necessary Prevents platelet clumping on the glass slide
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Specimen Collection Disadvantages: PLATELET SATELLITOSIS
causes pseudothrombocytopenia and pseudoleukocytosis Cause: Platelet specific auto antibodies that reacts best at room temperature
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Specimen Collection Platelet satellitosis
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Peripheral Smear Preparation
Wedge technique Coverslip technique Automated Slide Making and Staining
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Peripheral Smear Preparation
Wedge technique Push Type wedge preparation Pull Type wedge prepartion Easiest to master Most convenient and most commonly used technique
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Material needed Glass slide 3 in X 1in Beveled/chamfered edges
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Peripheral Smear Preparation
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Peripheral Smear Preparation
Procedures: Drop 2-3 mm blood at one end of the slide Diff safe can be used a. Easy dropping b. Uniform drop
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Precaution: Too large drop = too thick smear Too small drop = too thin smear
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The pusher slide be held securely with the dominant hand in a 30-45 deg angle.
- quick, swift and smooth gliding motion to the other side of the slide creating a wedge smear
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Control thickness of the smear by changing the angle of spreader slide
Allow the blood film to air-dry completely before staining. Do not blow to dry. The moisture from your breath will cause RBC artifact
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Peripheral Smear Preparation
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Peripheral Smear Preparation
Precautions: Ensure that the whole drop of blood is picked up and spread Too slow a slide push will accentuate poor leukocyte distribution, larger cells are pushed at the end of the slide Maintain an even gentle pressure on the slide Keep the same angle all the way to the end of the smear.
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Peripheral Smear Preparation
Precautions: Angle correction: 1. In case of Polycythemia: high Hct angle should be lowered - ensure that the smear made is not to thick 2. Too low Hct: Angle should be raised
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Feature of a Well Made Wedge Smear
Smear is 2/3 or 3/4 the entire slide Smear is finger shaped, very slightly rounded at the feathery edge: widest area of examination Lateral edges of the smear visible Should not touch any edge of the slide.
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Should be margin free, except for point of application
Smear is smooth without irregularities, holes or streaks When held up in light: feathery edge should show rainbow appearance Entire whole drop of blood is picked up and spread
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used for Bone marrow aspirate smears Advantage: Disadvantage:
Cover Slip Technique rarely used used for Bone marrow aspirate smears Advantage: excellent leukocyte distribution Disadvantage: labeling, transport, staining and storage is a problem
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22 x 27mm clean coverslip More routinely used for bone marrow aspirate Technique: 1. A drop of marrow aspirate is placed on top of 1 coverslip 2. Another coverslip is placed over the other allowing the aspirate to spread. 3. One is pulled over the other to create 1 thin smears 4. Mounted on a 3x1 inch glass slide
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Precautions: Very light pressure should be applied between the index finger and the thumb Crush preparation technique Too much pressure causes rupture of the cells making morphologic examination impossible Too little pressure prevents the bone spicules from spreading satisfactorily on the slide
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tail body head
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Thin area: Spherocytes which are really "spheroidocytes" or flattened red cells. True spherocytes will be found in other (Good) areas of smear.
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Thick area: Rouleaux, which is normal in such areas. Confirm by examining thin areas. If true rouleaux, two-three RBC's will stick together in a "stack of coins" fashion.
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Common causes of a poor blood smear
Drop of blood too large or too small. Spreader slide pushed across the slide in a jerky manner. Failure to keep the entire edge of the spreader slide against the slide while making the smear. Failure to keep the spreader slide at a 30° angle with the slide. Failure to push the spreader slide completely across the slide.
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6.Irregular spread with ridges and long tail:
Edge of spreader dirty or chipped; dusty slide 7.Holes in film: Slide contaminated with fat or grease 8.Cellular degenerative changes: delay in fixing, inadequate fixing time or methanol contaminated with water
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Biologic causes of a poor smear
Cold agglutinin: RBCs will clump together. Warm the blood at 37° C for 5 minutes, and then remake the smear. Lipemia: holes will appear in the smear. There is nothing you can do to correct this. Rouleaux: RBC’s will form into stacks resembling coins. There is nothing you can do to correct this
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Automatic Slide Making and Staining
SYSMEX 1000i
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Peripheral Smear Preparation
Drying of Smears Fan Heating pans No breath blowing of smears – may produce crenated RBCs or develop water artifact (drying artifact)
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Slide fixation and staining
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Romanowsky staining Leishman's stain : a polychromatic stain
Methanol : fixes cells to slide methylene blue stains RNA,DNA blue-grey color Eosin stains hemoglobin, eosin granules orange-red color pH value of phosphate buffer is very important
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Pure Wright stain or Wright Giemsa stain
Blood smears and bone marrow aspirate
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Procedure Thin smear are air dried. Flood the smear with stain.
Stain for 1-5 min. Experience will indicate the optimum time. Add an equal amount of buffer solution and mix the stain by blowing an eddy in the fluid. Leave the mixture on the slide for min. Wash off by running water directly to the centre of the slide to prevent a residue of precipitated stain. Stand slide on end, and let dry in air.
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Features of a well-stained PBS
Macroscopically: color should be pink to purple Microscopically: RCS: orange to salmon pink WBC: nuclei is purple to blue cytoplasm is pink to tan granules is lilac to violet Eosinophil: granules orange Basophil: granules dark blue to black
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Optimal Assessment Area:
RBCs are uniformly and singly distributed Few RBC are touching or overlapping Normal biconcave appearance 200 to 250 RBC per 100x OIO
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Trouble shooting Macroscopic
Overall bluer color: increased blood proteins (multiple myeloma, rouleaux formation) Grainy appearance: RBC agglutination (cold hemagglutinin diseases) Holes: increased lipid Blue specks at the feathery edge: Increased WBC and Platelet counts
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Microscopic: 10x Objective
Assess overall quality of the smear i.e feathery edge, quality of the color, distributin of the cells and the lateral edges can be checked for WBC distribution Snow-plow effect: more than 4x/cells per field on the feathery edge: Reject Fibrin strands: Reject Rouleaux formation, large blast cell assessment
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Too acidic Suitable Too basic
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Too Acid Stain:RBC too pale, WBC barely visible
insufficient staining time prolonged buffering or washing old stain Correction: lengthen staining time check stain and buffer pH shorten buffering or wash time
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Too Alkaline Stain:RBC gray, WBC too dark, Eosinophil granules are gray
thick blood smear prolonged staining insufficient washing alkaline pH of stain components heparinized sample Correction : check pH shorten stain time prolong buffering time
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Problem encountered during staining
Water artifact: moth eaten RBC, heavily demarcated central pallor on the RBC surface, crenation, refractory shiny blotches on the RBC 49
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What contributes to the problem:
humidity in the air as you air dry the slides. Water absorbed from the humid air into the alcohol based stain Solution: Drying the slide as quickly as possible. Fix with pure anhydrous methanol before staining. Use of 20% v/v methanol
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AUTOMATED SLIDE STAINERS
It takes about 5-10 minutes to stain a batch of smears Slides are just automatically dipped in the stain in the buffer and a series of rinses Disadvantages: Staining process has begun, no STAT slides can be added in the batch Aqueous solutions of stains are stable only after 3-6 hours
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QUICK STAINS Fast, convenient and takes about 1 minute to be accomplished Modified Wrights-Giemsa Stain, buffer is aged distilled water Cost effective Disadvantage: Quality of stains especially on color acceptance For small laboratories and for physician’s clinic only
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Manual differential
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Principle White Blood Cells
Check for even distribution and estimate the number present (also, look for any gross abnormalities present on the smear). Perform the differential count. Examine for morphologic abnormalities.
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Red Blood Cells, Examine for:
Size and shape ( Anisocytosis,Poikilocytosis Relative hemoglobin content. Polychromatophilia. Inclusions. Rouleaux formation or agglutination Platelets. Estimate number present. Examine for morphologic abnormalities.
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Observations Under 10X Check to see if there are good counting areas available free of ragged edges and cell clumps. Check the WBC distribution over the smear. Check that the slide is properly stained. Check for the presence of large platelets, platelet clumps, and fibrin strands.
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WBC estimation Under 40X Using the × 40 high dry with no oil.
Choose a portion of the peripheral smear where there is only slight overlapping of the RBCs. Count 10 fields, take the total number of white cells and divide by 10. To do a WBC estimate by taking the average number of white cells and multiplying by 2000.
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Platelet estimation Under 100X
Use the oil immersion lens estimate the number of platelets per field. Look at 5-6 fields and take an average. Multiply the average by 20,000. Note any macroplatelets.
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Platelets per oil immersion field (OIF)
<8 platelets/OIF = decreased 8 to 20 platelets/OIF = adequate >20 platelets/OIF = increased
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Manual differential counts
These counts are done in the same area as WBC and platelet estimates with the red cells barely touching. This takes place under × 100 (oil) using the zigzag method. Count 100 WBCs including all cell lines from immature to mature. Reporting results Absolute number of cells/µl = % of cell type in differential x white cell count
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If 10 or more nucleated RBC's (NRBC) are seen, correct the
White Count using this formula: Corrected WBC Count = WBC x 100/( NRBC + 100) Example : If WBC = 5000 and 10 NRBCs have been counted Then 5,000× 100/110 = The corrected white count is
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Determine a quantitative scale
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Left-shift: non-segmented neutrophil > 5%
Increased bands Means acute infection, usually bacterial
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Right-shift: hypersegmented neutrophil
Increased hypersegmented neutrophile
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Leukocytosis, a WBC above 10,000, is usually due to an increase in one of the five types of white blood cells Neutrophilic leukocytosis neutrophilia Lymphocytic leukocytosis - lymphocytosis Eosinophilic leukocytosis - eosinophilia Monocytic leukocytosis monocytosis Basophilic leukocytosis basophilia
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Morphology of WBC Normal blood smear
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Segmented neurophile Diameter: 12-16 Cytoplasm : pink
Granules: primary secondary Nucleus: dark purple blue dense chromatin 2-5 lobes
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Eosinophil One eosinophil - mature. Normal blood - 100X.
Orange colour granules. Bi-lobed nucleus
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Basophil One mature basophil. Blackish granules overlying the nucleus
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Normal lymphocytes Lymphocytes are the smallest WBC.
They have large condensed nucleus, with a scanty bluish cytoplasm.
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Normal monocyte Monocytes are the largest WBC.
The nucleus is slightly indented . The cytoplasm is abundant, sky blue in colour. Some have vacuoles in the cytoplasm.
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Red cells Normal red cells or erythrocytes show only slight variation in size and shape. The blood film should be examined in the area where the red cells are touching but not often overlapping.
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In this area many red cells have an area of central pallor which may be up to a third of the diameter of the cell. This is consequent on the shape of a normal red cell, which resembles a disc that is thinner in the centre.
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Summarizing RBC Parameters
RBC Count )RBC x 1012/L) Hb (g/dl) Hct (5 or L/L) Mean Cell Volume (MCV. Fl) Mean Cell Hb (MCH, pg) Mean Cell Hb Concentration (MCHC. %, g/dl)
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RBC distribution Morphology Size Shape Inclusions Young rbcs Color
Arrangement
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Platelets Normal platelets are also apparent.
They are small anuclear fragments between the red cells containing small purple-staining granules.
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Platelet aggregates Platelet aggregates may be composed of
apparently intact platelets, degranulated pale grey platelets or a mixture of both, as in this example. If the platelet count is low it is essential to examine the blood film carefully for platelet aggregates
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Platelet satellitism Platelet satellitism describes the phenomenon of adherence of platelets to white cells. It is an in vitro phenomenon of no clinical significance. However it is important that it is detected since the platelet count will be factitiously low.
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Staining of Peripheral Blood Smear
HEMA-TEK STAINER
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Component of automated CBC
Blood count basic parameters: Hb, Hct,RBC, WBC, platlet. Red cell indices: MCV, MCH, MCHC, RDW WBC differentials Cytogram or Scattergram Reticulocyte count
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Red cell parameters Direct Measurement Erythrocyte Concentration (RBC) x 106/ml Mean Corpuscular Volume (MCV) Femtolitre (fl) Hemoglobin (Hb) Gram/decilitre (g/dl) Indirect Measurement Hematocrit (Hct) = RBC x MCV/10 % Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin (MCH) = HB x 10 / RBC (pg) Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin Concentration (MCHC) = Hb/Hct x 100 (g/dl) Red Cell Distribution Width (RDW) %
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Reticulocyte count Reticulocyte =
non-nucleated RBC with polyribosomal RNA as stained by supravital stain (new methylene blue or brilliant cresyl blue) Polychromasia underestimates Reticulocytes Three methods of reticulocyte Enumeration Manual count on slide per 1,000RBC Automated CBC with reticulocyte counter (Coulter VCS, Cell-Dyne 4000, Technicon-H3) Flow cytometry with fluorescent dyes
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RBC disorders Hypochromic microcytic anemia Iron deficiency anemia Thalassemia and hemoglobinopathy Macrocytic anemia Megaloblastic anemia Non-megaloblastic macrocytic anemia
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Hemolytic anemia Immune hemolytic anemia: AIHA, DHTR Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MAHA) Red cell enzymopathies: G-6-PD deficiency RBC membrane defects: spherocytosis, ovalocytosis, elliptocytosis, stomatocytosis RBC inclusion bodies and parasites
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WBC disorders Leukopenia with absolute neutropenia: bone marrow failure, agranulocytosis with atypical lymphocytes: viral infection, chronic lymphoproliferative disorders with immature myeloid cells: acute leukemia, MDS or myelopthisis
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Leukocytosis Reactive leukocytosis: leukemoid reaction Acute leukemia: AML vs. ALL Chronic myeloproliferative disorders Chronic lymphoproliferative disorders Leukoerythroblastosis
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Platelet disorders Quantitative disorders Isolated thrombocytopenia: Immune vs. non-immune Thrombocytopenia associated with other hematologic abnormalities Thrombocytosis Qualitative disorders Giant platelets (megathrombocytes) Platelet inclusion or granule abnormality Bizarre in shape and size Megakaryocytes or megakaryoblasts
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