blood cells 4: blood result interpretation Flashcards
recall and explain common abnormalities in blood counts and films
what causes hypochromia?
lower haemoglobin content / concentration / flatter cell. (hypochromia & microcytosis often go together)
what causes hyperchromia?
thicker cells / abnormal cell shape
what are the important types of hyperchromatic red cells?
spherocytes (spherical) & irregularly contracted (small & dense). cells
what causes spherocytosis?
membrane not tethered to cytoskeleton in normal way
what causes red cells to become irregularly contracted?
oxidant damage to membrane & haemoglobin
what shapes can poikilocytes be?
spherocytes, irregularly contracted cells, sickle cells, target cells, elliptocytes, fragments (schitzocytes)
what are target cells?
cells with an accumulation of haemoglobin in the centre of the area of pallor - occur in obstructive jaundice, liver disease, haemoglobinopathies & hypospenism
what are elliptocytes?
ellipitical in shape, occur in hereditary elliptocytosis & iron deficiency
what are sickle cells?
crescent shaped as a result of polymerisation of haemoglobin S
what are fragments?
small pieces of erythrocytes - indicate a red cell has fragmented
what are rouleaux?
stacks of red cells (sing. rouleau) - result from alterations in plasma proteins, common finding when there is infection / inflammation, particularly with presence of heavy proteins eg IgM
what are agglutinates?
irregular clumps resulting from antibodies on the surface of erythrocytes
how do agglutinates and rouleaux differ visually?
rouleaux = neat stack of coins, agglutinates = irregular messy stack of coins
what is a Howell-Jolly body?
remnant of a nucleus in an erythrocyte (stains same dark purple as nucleus) - commonest cause is splenic function (as spleen usuallly removes nucleus)
what other abnormalities are often seen on a film with Howell-Jolly bodies?
target cells & fragments
what disease causes atypical lymphocytes?
infectious mononucleosis (glandular fever)
what is toxic granulation?
heavy granulation of neutrophils - results from infection, inflammation & tissue necrosis (but is normal in pregnancy)
what are hypersegmentated neutrophils?
increase in average number of neutrophil lobes / segments - usually results from lack of vitamin B12 or folic acid
how can you tell if a patient is anaemic from a blood film?
low iron content -> low vicsosity -> bigger gaps between cells
what is the difference between a reference & normal range?
reference is derived from a carefully defined population (mean +- 2SD = 95% population) but normal is more arbitrary
what are the different parameters measured and their units?
WBC (x10^9/l), RBS (x10^12/l), Hb (g/l), Hct / PCV (% / l/l), MCV (fl), MCH (pg), MCHC (g/l), platelet count (x10^9/l)
how are cells counted?
by automated instruments - thin stream of blood flows and electrical / light changes detected