L6 - interpreting the full blood count Flashcards
The ‘normal range’ changes with age and co-morbidities, name another one
sex/ ethnicity/ location
How is the ‘normal range’ calculated
Central 95% of a healthy population, so you can be healthy and outside the normal range
When is mean cell haemoglobin as useful measure to take?
assessment of anaemia - reduced in iron deficiency and increased or normal in macrocytic anaemias
A reticulocyte count is a measurement of the number of circulating immature erythrocytes, give an example of when this would be increased and decreased
Increased - haemolytic anaemia - more are being made to make up for the loss of mature ones/ recent blood loss/ recovery from bone marrow suppression/response to EPO/response to iron or B12/folate replacement
Decreased - Bone marrow failure
polycythemia is used to describe an increased haematocrit in the blood, packed cell volume measures this, mean cell volume is another test, what disease is this the most important paramater to screen for?
MCV - looks at the size of RBCS’s - will be raised in macrocytic anaemia and lowered in microcytic anaemias (TAILS)
When would a blood film be required
When a sample falls outside of the normal range/ if there is a significant change from the normal within the normal range/ analyser thinks there are abnormal cells present
What two types of result would be considered ‘abnormal’ and need further investigation?
Outside the normal range/significant change from someone’s baseline - could still be in the ‘normal’ range
When spun out a blood sample can be separated into plasma, a ‘buffy’ coat and hematocrit. What makes up each of these?
Hematocrit - RBC’s
Buffy coat - WBC’s and platelets
Plasma - Other blood cells, hormones, nutrients, water etc.
Give an example of a disease where we’d see the ‘haemoglobin’ - paramater of the FBC change
NOTE - This paramater measures for the conecntration of Hb in the peripheral blood. Could change with haemolysis (clotted Hb goes up but this measures free Hb)/dehydration (reduction in plasma)/diuretic
Give an example of a disease where red celll count would go up and one where it would go down
Down - Iron deficiency anaemia
Up - thalassaemia trait (more is made to compensate for small size)
What parameter of a FBC is low if RBC’s are ‘hypochromic’?
MCH
If cells are ‘dimorphic’, what does this indicate to the professional?
That there are two distinct populations of RBC’s (commonly seen after a blood transfusion
What does ‘polychromasia’ mean?
Presence of reticulocytes in peripheral blood - be able to recognise this
look at lecture near the bottom at all the types of blood films, very useful
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In what disease would we see schistocytes on a blood film - Sheared RBC fragments
Microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia