Lab Procedures Set 7

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Microhematocrit

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Microhematocrit

A measurement of the relative RBC volume for a (small quantity) volume of whole blood spun down in a capillary tube

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Microhematocrit Procedure

The capillary tube with whole blood is spun down in a centrifuge, RBCs pack at the bottom, hematocrit is the percent of the tube filled with RBCs.

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What makes up the buffy coat? Is it included in the hematocrit measurement?

WBCs and platelets make up the buffy coat and are not included in the hematocrit measurement.

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Why is the rule of three important?

The result has to agree with the rule of three. If it doesn’t, the hemoglobin or hematocrit would be inaccurate.

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Difference between microhematocrit and hematocrit?

Microhematocrit is considered the manual version of measuring hematocrit vs hematocrit on the analyzer

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Why is the microhematocrit higher than the automatic hematocrit?

Microhematocrit will be a little bit higher than hematocrit because oof the plasma trapped in erythrocytes.

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Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate

Nonspecific screening test indicating inflammation based on how quickly RBCs stack and settle

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Increased ESR associated diseases

Kidney disease, pregnancy, rheumatic fever, rheumatoid arthritis, anemia, syphilis, lupus, thyroid disease, elevated room temperature

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Decreased ESR associated diseases

Congestive heart failure, hyper viscosity, decreased fibrinogen, polycythemia, sickle cell anemia

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Westergren method

uses Na citrate diluent with whole blood, read at 60 minutes

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Automated ESR method

on the Alcor, detects rouleaux via flow cell and photometry

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Manual reticulocyte count

finds the bone marrow RBC production index, most effective measure of erythropoiesis, counted out of 1000 RBCs

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Decreased Retic associated diseases

Aplastic anemia, exposure to radiation, chronic infection, medications, megaloblastic anemia

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Increased Retic associated diseases

rapid blood loss, high elevation, hemolytic anemia, medications, pregnancy

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Miller eye disc

helps to not count 1000 RBCs, provides standardized area

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How to perform a manual retic

Mix equal parts stain and whole blood for the manual retic, count all reticulocytes in the large and small square, count small squares until you get to 112 RBCs

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Manual retic formula

Retic % = Retics in large square / (RBCs in small square * 9) * 100 %

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What stain is used for the reticulocyte counts?

New Methylene Blue

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Microhematocrit: sources of error

not filling the capillary tube, reading the buffy coat, not following the rule of three

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ESR: sources of error

not keeping the tube free from vibration, not keeping the tube level, not pushing the blood to the zero mark, not replacing the cap

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Manual retic: sources of error

Interferences: nucleated erythrocytes, Howell-jolly bodies, Pappenheimer bodies, cold agglutinins, basophilic stippling, heinz bodies, parasites, autofluorescence

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Percent retic, RPI formula

Retic % = Retics in large square / (RBCs in small square * 9) * 100 %

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Conditions associated with increased ESR and retic counts

  • Pregnancy

  • Hemolytic anemia

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Conditions associated with decreased ESR and retic counts

Aplastic anemia / sickle cell anemia

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Soucres of error on the hemocytometer

Not evenly distributing the object across the hemocytometer.

Overcrowding the hemocytometer.

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Cytospin

concentrates the cells into a smaller area of the slide

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Principle of the LAP test

Helps differentiate CML from a leukemoid reaction

Naphthol AS-BI is hydrolyzed by the enzyme at an alkaline pH. The hydrolyzed substrate with a red-violet LB or fast blue BB dye produces a colored precipitate at the site of enzyme activity

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Decreased LAP =

Untreated CML

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During a Leukemoid reaction LAP changes from…

High normal to increased

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High LAP =

Pregnancy, polycythemia vera

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Low LAP =

PNH, Sideroblastic Anemia, Myelodysplastic disorders

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