Introduction and Chemical Pathology Lab Flashcards

1
Q

What is ESR and how does it change in infection?

A

Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate – the rate at which red blood cells settle out of suspension in blood plasma, measured under standard conditions

ESR increases in infection

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2
Q

Fever is normally a sign of infection. How is it possible for some autoimmune conditions to cause fever?

A

Fever is caused by the immune system rather than the organism Hence it can occur in autoimmune disease in the absence of an organism

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3
Q

What are the four tube colours for blood collection and what do the colours mean?

A

Red – no anticoagulant
Yellow – gel – makes the coagulation occur faster Purple – potassium EDTA
Grey – fluoride oxalate (poison)

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4
Q

What are the purple cap bottles used for?

A

Potassium EDTA keeps the cells alive

It is used when measuring cell counts or anything in general to do with the cells

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5
Q

What are the grey cap bottles used for?

A

Fluoride oxalate kills the red blood cells – this is used for measuring blood glucose because live red blood cells will consume the glucose

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6
Q

Which bottle is used for measuring HbA1c?

A

Purple Top – potassium EDTA

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7
Q

What is serum and what is it useful for measuring?

A

When blood clots and you remove the clot you are left with serum

Serum contains electrolytes but NO clotting factors

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8
Q

How is gel designed so that it separates serum from the rest of the blood?

A

It is more dense than serum but less dense than cells so it separates the serum from the cells

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9
Q

What can skew the electrolyte measurements of the serum?

A

Haemolysis – red cells contain a lot of potassium so haemolysis caused by poor collection or the sample being left out too long will result in an increased serum potassium concentration

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10
Q

What does the blue top mean?

A

Contains citrate
It is reversible and used to measure clotting factors
Citrate binds to calcium and prevents clotting
When you get a sample of blood in a citrate bottle, you add just the right amount of calcium to trigger the clotting cascade

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11
Q

What is the blue top used to measure?

A

Prothrombin time (PT) - measures integrity of extrinsic system

Active partial thromboplastin time (APTT) - measures integrity of intrinsic system

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12
Q

What is creatinine a marker of?

A

Renal function (GFR) – it is produced by the body at a constant rate and it is excreted at a constant rate provided that the kidneys are functioning normally with little absorbed or secreted

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13
Q

What is urea a marker of?

A

Dehydration

It is also excreted by the kidneys

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14
Q

How do urea and creatinine change in renal disease?

A

They increase, urea rises first

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15
Q

What are the three main liver enzymes?

A
Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) 
Aspartate aminotransferase (AST) 
Alkaline phosphatase (ALP)
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16
Q

How does albumin change in liver disease?

A

Albumin levels fall in liver disease

17
Q

What other cells, other than hepatocytes, contain alkaline phosphatase?

A

Osteoblasts

18
Q

Other than liver disease, when else might ALP be high?

A

After a fracture – osteoblasts use ALP to build more bone

19
Q

What is the first thing you do if a patient presents with heart attack type symptoms?

A

ECG

20
Q

What is measured to confirm a heart attack?

A

Measure troponin levels

21
Q

List the main cardiac enzymes.

A
Troponins  
Creatine Kinase (CK) Aspartate aminotransferase (AST) 
Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)
22
Q

What else could cause heart attack type symptoms?

A

A bleeding peptic ulcer

23
Q

What is HbA1c?

A

HBA1c is glycated heamoglobin;
if glucose sticks to Hb –> Hb is heavier –> moves less on electrophoresis;
poorly-controlled diabetes = more HBA1c + stronger band