Term
What are some preanalytical sources of error? |
|
Definition
Poor technique, inappropriate container, interfering substances (hemolysis, lipemia), wrong labeled sample!, damage during transport |
|
|
Term
What are some analytical sources of error? |
|
Definition
Expired reagents, change in reagent lot, analyzer limitation, appropriate for species? |
|
|
Term
What are some sources of post-analytical error? |
|
Definition
Transcription errors, results for the wrong patient. Oops. |
|
|
Term
Which blood tubes do not have anticoagulant? |
|
Definition
Red top tubes, Serum separator tubes (SST, tiger top, marbled) |
|
|
Term
What do I put in red top tubes? |
|
Definition
Blood for chemistries, fluids, urine, looking for antibody, hormone or drug levels. |
|
|
Term
Which tubes have anticoagulants? |
|
Definition
Purple top (EDTA), green top (heparin), blue top (citrate) |
|
|
Term
What do I use purple top tubes for? |
|
Definition
Cell counts in blood or fluid, use plasma for hormones, ammonia. |
|
|
Term
What do I use green top tubes for? |
|
Definition
Cell counts (especially with reptiles), use plasma for chemistries, hormones, ammonia |
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|
Term
What do I use a blue top tube for? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Ideally how many patients should a reference interval be based on? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What does the sensitivity of a test indicate? |
|
Definition
The proportion of patients with the disease AND a positive test. |
|
|
Term
What does the specificity of a test indicate? |
|
Definition
The proportion of patients without the disease AND with a negative test. |
|
|
Term
What does efficieny/accuracy indicate? |
|
Definition
Percentage of patients that are correctly classified by the test |
|
|
Term
What is the positive predictive value? |
|
Definition
Probability that a positive test is correct. |
|
|
Term
Which kind of test is a good screening test? |
|
Definition
A test with high sensitivity. |
|
|
Term
What is a test with high specificity good for? |
|
Definition
It is a good confirmatory test. |
|
|
Term
How does an impedance counter work? |
|
Definition
Cells are bad at conducting electricity, so when the cells pass through a current they create resistance proportional to the size of the cell |
|
|
Term
What are some disadvantages of impedance analyzers? |
|
Definition
Need daily maintenance, WBC differential count may be less accurate, platelet counts may be inaccurate. |
|
|
Term
How does flow cytometry work? |
|
Definition
Cells in suspension flow through a light source, the scatter of light the cell creates is collected and analyzed. |
|
|
Term
How does flow cytometry work? |
|
Definition
Cells in suspension flow through a light source, the scatter of light the cell creates is collected and analyzed. |
|
|
Term
What are some errors introduced with sample age? |
|
Definition
Platelets decrease and clump, leukocyte morphology changes, RBCs can swell or shrink. |
|
|
Term
What is the difference between PCV and Hct? |
|
Definition
PCV is measured manually, while Hct is calculated using the MCV and the RBC count. The numbers should be very close. |
|
|
Term
What is fibrinogen used to measure? |
|
Definition
Good indicator of inflammation in ruminants (and horses), increases in fibrinogen are often seen before changes in WBC count. Also increases with pregnancy. |
|
|
Term
How do you measure fibrinogen from a blood sample? |
|
Definition
Put your blood in a crit tube, heat it for 3 minutes to make the fibrinogen precipitate, spin it down and measure. |
|
|
Term
How do you measure fibrinogen from a blood sample? |
|
Definition
Put your blood in a crit tube, heat it for 3 minutes to make the fibrinogen precipitate, spin it down and measure. |
|
|
Term
What is the relationship of Hgb to PCV? |
|
Definition
Hgb should be 1/3 of the PCV!! Know this! |
|
|
Term
What things artificially increase hgb when measured colorimetrically? |
|
Definition
Sample turbidity, like lipemia, heinz bodies, cell stroma from high white cell count. Hemolysis will also give you more hgb than you would expect for the RBC count. |
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|
Term
What is the MCHC and what affects it? |
|
Definition
Mean cell hgb concentration. Affected by both RBC count and RBC size. Increased MCHC is an artifact. |
|
|
Term
What is the approximate RBC lifespan in a dog? In a cat? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are some clinical signs of anemia? |
|
Definition
Pale mucus membranes, weakness, lethargy, exercise intolerance, systolic heart murmur, hypotension, weak pulses, maybe pica |
|
|
Term
What are the compensatory responses to anemia? |
|
Definition
Tachypnea, tachycardia, ^ cardiac output, ^ 2,3-DPG (releases more O2 into tissue) |
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|
Term
What does the MCV indicate? |
|
Definition
Expression of RBC size. Direct measurement most reliable. Macrocytic- bigger than normal, microcytic- smaller than normal. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
The average RBC Hgb concentration (affected by both Hb level and cell volume). Less Hgb than usual- hypochromic. Normochromic within range. Hyperchromasia is an artifact. Can't happen for real. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Average amount of Hgb in average RBC. Same terminology as MCHC. Hyperchromasia still an artifact. |
|
|
Term
What is the primary finding of a regenerative anemia? |
|
Definition
Increased immature RBCs in peripheral blood- usually indicated by increased polychromasia or reticulocytosis. |
|
|
Term
[image] What is the description of the indicated cells? |
|
Definition
Polychromasia- larger than mature RBCs with dispersed ribosomes and decreased hemoglobin. |
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|
Term
What stain do you use to do a reticulocyte count? |
|
Definition
New Methylene Blue. The stain causes darkening of the ribosomes in the baby RBCs. Reticulocytes are reported as a percentage of the total RBC count. |
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|
Term
[image] What is the pattern of this red blood cell? What does it indicate? |
|
Definition
Basophilic stippling, indicates regenerative anemia. |
|
|
Term
What are three signs of RBC immaturity? |
|
Definition
Polychromasia, basophilic stippling, reticulocytes. |
|
|
Term
What is the hallmark of regeneration in cats and dogs? |
|
Definition
Polychromasia +/- basophilic stippling. Use retic count to quantify. |
|
|
Term
What percent of retics is considered regenerative in cats and dogs? |
|
Definition
Cats: greater than 1%, dogs greater than 1.5% |
|
|
Term
What is regenerative anemia caused by? |
|
Definition
Blood loss, hemolysis. There is a greater response with hemolysis, and a greater response with a lower PCV. |
|
|
Term
What does a large animal regenerative response look like? |
|
Definition
Basophilic stippling, anisocytosis, +/- polychromasia. |
|
|
Term
What does an equine regenerative response look like? |
|
Definition
Horses do NOT release reticulocytes. +/- macrocytosis without polychromasia. |
|
|
Term
Normocytic, normochromic anemia. |
|
Definition
Indicates suppressed erythropoeisis, acute or low grade regenerative anemia, equine anemias. |
|
|
Term
Macrocytic, hypochromic anemia. |
|
Definition
Strong regenerative response to anemia. |
|
|
Term
Macrocytic, normochromic anemia. |
|
Definition
Occasionally seen in regenerative anemia in horses. |
|
|
Term
Microcytic, hypochromic anemia. |
|
Definition
Iron deficiency, chronic liver disease. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Unequal sized RBCs, can be large or small. May indicate regenerative anemia, or a maturation defect. Small cells can be fragments or extra divisions of RBCs. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Red cell distribution width- calculates how much the red cell size differs from the mean. |
|
|
Term
When do we see circulating nucleated RBCs? |
|
Definition
Lead poisoning, splenic disease, bone marrow damage/disease, hypoxia, seizures, heat stroke, inflammation, Schnauzers |
|
|
Term
When might we see basophilic stippling? |
|
Definition
Lead toxicity, bone marrow disorders, drug toxicities (like chloramphenicol), regenerative anemia. |
|
|
Term
What is poikilocytosis? And what can cause it? |
|
Definition
Abnormal RBC shapes. Caused by membrane abnormalities, mechanical or chemical injury, oxidative injury, depletion of ATP. |
|
|
Term
[image] How would you describe these blood cells? |
|
Definition
Spherocytes, round, dense with no central pallor. Defective bit of membrane has been pinched off by macrophages. Membrane reseals and then the cell gets killed. |
|
|
Term
What can cause the appearance of spherocytes? |
|
Definition
RBCs are coated with antibody and get destroyed, or RBC fragmentation. |
|
|
Term
What are schistocytes and how do they happen? |
|
Definition
Fragmented pieces of red blood cells, due to microangiopathic hemolysis (RBCs are sheared off while negotiating around inflammatory things). Not usually a direct cause of anemia. |
|
|
Term
What are Heinz bodies and how do they form? |
|
Definition
Amorphous precipitates of oxidized, denatured hemoglobin. They stain as a pale round bubble usually on the edge of the cell. |
|
|
Term
[image]What are the structures at the edge of the cells called? |
|
Definition
Heinz bodies, caused by oxidative stress. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
When the hemoglobin gets pushed to one side of the RBC due to oxidative damage. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Crenated cells with uniform blunt or sharp projections. |
|
|
Term
What are some causes of echinocytes? |
|
Definition
Uremia, changes in membrane phospholipids, RBC dehydration, RBC ATP depletion, an artifact of various things. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Bizzare, ameboid looking RBCs with asymmetrical spicules that vary in length and thickness. |
|
|
Term
What causes acanthocytes? |
|
Definition
Excess cholesterol in the membrane (for various reasons), lipophilic drugs. |
|
|
Term
What causes acanthocytes? |
|
Definition
Excess cholesterol in the membrane (for various reasons), lipophilic drugs. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Abnormally thin RBCs, may appear thin and pale. |
|
|
Term
What are codocytes (or 'target' cells)? |
|
Definition
A red blood cell that looks like a bullseye, Hgb is concentrated in the center of the cell. Causes are immature RBCs, increased cholesterol, splenectomy, iron deficiency. |
|
|
Term
What are causes of regenerative anemia? |
|
Definition
Blood loss: acute, chronic, internal, external. Can lead to iron deficiency. Hemolysis: intravascular, extravascular. |
|
|
Term
What is the hallmark of blood loss? |
|
Definition
Combined decrease in both PCV and total protein. |
|
|
Term
What is a normal reticulocyte percentage in a dog? Cat? |
|
Definition
Dog: 0-2%, up to .5% aggregate, up to 10% punctate |
|
|
Term
What absolute reticulocyte count in a dog is considered regenerative? In a cat? |
|
Definition
Dog: >60,000. Cat: >50,000 |
|
|
Term
What reticulocyte percentage is regenerative in a cat? Dog? |
|
Definition
>1% in cats, >1.5% in dogs. |
|
|
Term
How many days does it take to see reticulocytosis following blood loss? |
|
Definition
3-5 days. Normal PCV in 1-4 weeks. |
|
|
Term
What blood parameter normalizes first after blood loss? |
|
Definition
Total protein normalizes first. Albumin shifts back into vasculature. More albumin production. Recovery from internal blood loss is faster. |
|
|
Term
What are two body iron stores? |
|
Definition
Ferritin and hemosiderin. |
|
|
Term
How is iron transported in blood? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
A transported that moves iron from GI cells into the blood. |
|
|
Term
How is iron absorption regulated? |
|
Definition
By an unknown signal from the bone marrow. This signal regulates ferroportin levels. One oral dose of iron decreases the absorption of a second dose becaues the first dose increases hepcidin. Hepcidin breaks down ferroportin molecules. |
|
|
Term
How can transferrin be related to iron deficiency? |
|
Definition
With iron deficiency, the liver increases production of transferrin. In anemia, transferrin may have decreased saturation. |
|
|
Term
Inflammation will decrease liver production of transferrin. |
|
Definition
Can contribute to the anemia of chronic disease. Lots of inflammation, less transferring, less iron around, anemia! |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Thousands of iron atoms embedded in a protein shell that prevents the formation of reactive oxygen species. Iron is dangerous when it goes rouge! |
|
|
Term
What are the functions of hepcidin? |
|
Definition
Hepcidin is the master iron regulator! It stimulates the degradation of ferroportin, which inhibits intestinal absorption, and it inhibits the release of iron from macrophage stores. |
|
|
Term
What is iron deficiency usually caused by? |
|
Definition
External blood loss, like bleeding GI tumor, parasites. Can sometimes be from dietary malabsorption. |
|
|
Term
What abnormalities do you see with extravascular hemolysis? |
|
Definition
Bilirubinemia, bilirubinuria, RBC morphologic abnormalities. |
|
|
Term
What abnormalities do you see with intravascular hemolysis? |
|
Definition
Billirubinemia, bilirubinuria, hemoglobinemia, hemoglobinuria, RBC morphologic abnormalities. |
|
|
Term
T/F: Immune mediated hemolysis is usually extravascular. |
|
Definition
True. It can be intravascular with complement fixation. |
|
|
Term
What does a positive Coombs test indicate? |
|
Definition
There is antibody against a 'material' adherent to the RBC. |
|
|
Term
T/F: Sphereocytes are not usually caused by an immune mediated process. |
|
Definition
F. They usually are. Spherocytes are caused by partial phagocytosis of RBC membrane by splenic macrophages. Usually triggered by a membrane defect. |
|
|
Term
T/F: It is easy to identify spherocytes in species with small RBCs. |
|
Definition
False. It is hard to identify spherocytes in species with small RBCs (like cat, horse, ruminants). Their RBCs can look like spherocytes. |
|
|
Term
How do you determine whether autoagglutination is actually rouleaux? |
|
Definition
Dilute the blood with saline. Rouleaux would disperse with dilution. |
|
|
Term
What is icterus a sign of? |
|
Definition
Hyperbilirubinemia. Possible ddx are liver disease, biliary obstruction, or hemolysis. |
|
|
Term
What are some characteristics of IMHA? |
|
Definition
Associated with strong regenerative response (takes 3-5 days), can also cause an inflammatory leukogram, strongly suggested by spherocytosis, confirmed by autoagglutination. May need a Coombs test. When autoagglutination is present you do NOT need a Coombs test. |
|
|
Term
Why are cat blood types weird? |
|
Definition
Type A cats have naturally occuring antibodies to B, and vice versa. Type AB cats don't have antibody against either. Therefore if you give type A blood to a type B cat, it triggers severe intravascualr hemolysis and possibly death. |
|
|
Term
Why can we safely transfuse a horse or a dog ONCE without a problem? |
|
Definition
Dogs and horses lack naturally occuring antibodies. The first transfusion with incompatible blood with sensitize the animal to a reaction on a second transfusion. |
|
|
Term
What do chocolate-brown mucous membranes indicate? |
|
Definition
They are evidence of methemoglobinemia. Methemoglobin forms within minutes of exposure to antioxidants. |
|
|
Term
What findings are indicative of nonregenerative anemia? |
|
Definition
Absence of polychromasia or insufficient reticulocytosis. |
|
|
Term
What are the main causes of nonregenerative anemia? |
|
Definition
Acute blood loss or hemolysis, anemia of inflammation/chronic disease, iron depletion, renal disease, chronic liver disease, hypothyroidism, hypoadrenocorticism, bone marrow disease. |
|
|
Term
What is anemia of inflammation commonly associated with? |
|
Definition
Inflammatory processes, chronic infections, tissue injury, fractures, neoplasia. Most common cause of anemia in small animals!! |
|
|
Term
What are the qualities of anemia of inflammation? |
|
Definition
MILD nonregenerative anemia, that is normocytic, normochromic. Also called anemia of chronic disease. |
|
|
Term
Mechanism of anemia of renal disease |
|
Definition
Moderate to severe nonregenerative anemia- caused by decreased production of Epo and decreased RBC survival. |
|
|
Term
What is the mechanism of anemia of liver disease? |
|
Definition
Impaired mobilization of iron stores (because liver isnt making transferrin), impaired marrow response, decreased RBC survival. Usually normocytic, normochromic. |
|
|
Term
What is pure red cell aplasia? |
|
Definition
Selective reduction of erythroid precursors in the marrow. Cats: usually from FeLV, dogs: usually immune mediated |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Decreased production of ALL cell lines in the marrow. The marrow is filled with adipose cells. Lymphocytes are not as affected. |
|
|
Term
What on signs of aplastic anemia? |
|
Definition
Pancytopenia on CBC- nonregenerative anemia, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia. Can lead to unexplained infections and unexplained bleeding. |
|
|
Term
What are some causes of aplastic anemia? |
|
Definition
Drugs, infectious agents, toxins, radiation/chemo, idiopathic. |
|
|
Term
What is the most antigenic blood group in the dog? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Which equine blood types are the most antigenic? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Which organisms cause feline infectious anemia? |
|
Definition
Mycoplasma haemofelis and Mycoplasma haemominutum. |
|
|
Term
Where are platelets produced? |
|
Definition
In the bone marrow from megakaryocytes. |
|
|
Term
What is the basic platelet structure? |
|
Definition
They are discoid, anucleate cytoplasmic fragments 5-7 um in length. |
|
|
Term
What does thrombopoietin do? |
|
Definition
It is released by various locations in the body, and in circulation binds to platelets, and once its bound becomes inactive. If few circulating platelets are around, there will be more unbound thrombopoietin which will stiumlate megakaryocyte production and platelet release. |
|
|
Term
Which part of the platelet is the first to sense change in the vasculature? |
|
Definition
The glycocalyx, which is covered with receptors that facilitate platelet adhesion. |
|
|
Term
What does the platelet open canalicular system do? |
|
Definition
It allows the movement of substances between platelets and plasma so platelets dont need to lyse. It also helps increase surface area of the platelet which is important when activated. |
|
|
Term
Why is the dense tubular system of the ER so important in the platelet? |
|
Definition
It stores calcium which is essential for platelet activation and synthesizes thromboxane. |
|
|
Term
Which platelet organelles are visible by light microscopy? |
|
Definition
Alpha granules, they are the dark blue granules. They have important things in them! |
|
|
Term
What are the functions of platelets? |
|
Definition
Primary hemostasis (formation of the inital plug), secondary hemostasis, recruit inflammatory cells, repair wounds. |
|
|
Term
How do we assess platelets in the patient? |
|
Definition
Quantitative: platelet count, mean platelet volume, blood smear estimate, plateletcrit. Qualitative: buccal mucosal bleeding time, thromboelastography. |
|
|
Term
How many platelets should you typically count per 100x field (in a dog and cat)? |
|
Definition
10 per 100x field. If you count less and don't see clumps, you should suspect thrombocytopenia. |
|
|
Term
What are some signs of thrombocytopenia? |
|
Definition
Mucosal bleeding, petechiae, ecchymoses, epistaxis, hematuria, post op bleeding. |
|
|
Term
Which WBCs are granulocytes? |
|
Definition
Neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils. |
|
|
Term
What are the main functions of neutrophils? |
|
Definition
Phagocytosis and antimicrobial activity. |
|
|
Term
What percentage of the neutrophil count must bands be to be considered a significant left shift? |
|
Definition
Greater than 10% of the neutrophil count. |
|
|
Term
What is a degenerative left shift? |
|
Definition
A degenerative left shift means that immature cells outnumber segs. Usually a poor prognosis. |
|
|
Term
What is the most common cause of toxic change in neutrophils? |
|
Definition
Endotoxemia due to bacterial infection. Cells are insulted during their maturation in the bone marrow. |
|
|
Term
What are some morphological changes that come along with toxic change in neutrophils? |
|
Definition
Increased cytoplasmic basophilia, Dohle bodies, foamy vacuolated cytoplasm, toxic granulation, nuclear swelling. |
|
|
Term
What are the two basic mechanisms for neutrophilia? |
|
Definition
Increased prodcution (inflammation, myeloproliferative disorders), shift of neutrophils from marginal circulating pool (corticosteroid, epinephrine) |
|
|
Term
What qualifies a mature neutrophilia? |
|
Definition
A neutrophilia with NO left shift. Consists of only mature neutrophils. |
|
|
Term
When might we see a corticosteroid-induced leukocytosis? |
|
Definition
Pain, chronic stress, corticosteroid therapy, hyperadrenocorticism. Common in dogs, not so much in cats. |
|
|
Term
What is the typical pattern of a corticosteroid leukocytosis? |
|
Definition
Neutrophilia (without a left shift, or very mild) because neutrophils are shifted from the marginal to the circulating pool and some are released from the storage pool. Monocytosis, and lymphopenia. |
|
|
Term
What is the most characteristic feature of the corticosteroid/stress leukogram? |
|
Definition
Lymphopenia. Should be low or at least low normal, and may not show the other characteristics. |
|
|
Term
What is the typical pattern of an epinephrine/physiologic leukocytosis? |
|
Definition
Neutrophilia with NO left shift (up to 2x normal, demarginates all the neutrophils), lymphoCYTOSIS (opposite of corticosteroid leukogram), very short lived leukocytosis. |
|
|
Term
What is the typical pattern of an epinephrine/physiologic leukocytosis? |
|
Definition
Neutrophilia with NO left shift (up to 2x normal, demarginates all the neutrophils), lymphoCYTOSIS (opposite of corticosteroid leukogram), very short lived leukocytosis. |
|
|
Term
What consists of a inflammatory leukogram? |
|
Definition
A neutrophilia, very often with a left shift. Monocytosis sometimes happens. Lymphopenia often occurs, usually in actue inflammation. |
|
|
Term
What are some causes of neutropenia? |
|
Definition
Decreased production, increased tissue demand, shift of cells from circulating to marginal pool. |
|
|
Term
What are some common causes of lymphocytosis? |
|
Definition
Epinephrine, chronic antigen stimulation, hypoadrenocorticism, lymphoid neoplasia. |
|
|
Term
What are common causes of lymphopenia? |
|
Definition
Increased corticosteroid levels, acute infections, loss of lymph into various places, hereditary immunodeficiency. |
|
|
Term
When would I usually see basophilia/ |
|
Definition
Parasitic disease, allergic disease, rarely neoplasia. |
|
|
Term
Where is active bone marrow retained in the adult? |
|
Definition
In the epiphyses and in flat bones (sternum, pelvis, ribs, vertebrae) |
|
|
Term
Where does EPO come from and what is its release stimulated by? |
|
Definition
Released by peritubular interstitial cells of the kidney, and it stimulated by hypoxia. |
|
|