Lab Evaluation of Hematologic Parameters Flashcards
acronym for differential blood cell count in a CBC
“Never Let Monkeys Eat Bananas”:
neutrophils > lymphocytes > monocytes > eosinophils > basophils
normal hemoglobin (Hb) value for men
14-18 g/dL
normal hemoglobin (Hb) value for women
12-16 g/dL
hemoglobin - overview
*value is measured in grams per deciliter
*tells you how much of the protein hemoglobin (in grams) is in one deciliter of blood
hematocrit (Hct) - overview
*value is a percentage
*tells you the volume of packed RBCs in a given volume of whole blood
*Hct is typically 3x the Hb
mean corpuscular volume (MCV) - overview
tells average size of red blood cells
mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH) - overview
*tells average WEIGHT of hemoglobin per cell
*units = picograms
*ex: 30 picograms of hemoglobin per RBC
mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) - overview
*tells average CONCENTRATION of hemoglobin in RBCs
*units = grams per deciliter
*ex: 35 grams of Hb per deciliter of RBCs
red cell distribution width (RDW) - overview
tells us how VARIED the sizes of the red cells are
relationship between MCV and RDW
*if RDW is normal, all cells are similar size (MCV is a good indicator)
*if RDW is increased, cell size is NOT known (MCV is not a good indicator)
-UNLESS the MCV is LOW
note - MCV = mean corpuscular volume; RDW = red cell distribution width
reticulocyte count
*measures the percentage of reticulocytes (immature RBCs) circulating in the blood
*methylene blue stain identifies precipitated RNA in young cells
*larger than mature RBC, with less central pallor
*not part of CBC; need to order separated
microcytosis
*term used when RBCs have a low MCV (smaller than normal)
*causes include:
1. iron deficiency anemia
2. anemia of chronic disease
3. hemoglobinopathies (sickle cell, thalassemias, etc)
4. copper deficiency
5. lead poisoning
*often associated with a low MCH (hypochromia: low weight of Hb in cell)
RBC morphological abnormality: basophilic stippling
*punctate basophilic precipitation of undegraded RNA in RBCs
*a sign of INEFFECTIVE HEMATOPOIESIS
*seen in LEAD TOXICITY, sideroblastic anemia, and thalassemias
RBC morphological abnormality: target cells
*result of redundant red cell membrane / decreased cell volume
*causes:
-hemoglobinopathies/THALASSEMIAS
-iron deficiency anemia
-drug-induced hemolytic anemia
-liver disease
RBC morphological abnormality: schistocytes
*aka helmet cells
*associated with microangiopathic hemolytic anemias (DIC, TTP, HUS) or mechanical hemolysis (ex. heart valve prosthesis)
RBC morphological abnormality: acanthocytes
*aka thorn cells or spur cells
*associated with LIVER DISEASE, abetalipoproteinemia, vitamin E deficiency
note - can also just be artifact
RBC morphological abnormality: rouleaux
*“rolls” or stacks of coins
*RBCs abnormally adhere to each other due to increased immunoglobulin production
*associated with PLASMA CELL DYSCRASIAS (multiple myeloma, plasma cell leukemia) or infection
note - can also just be artifact
RBC morphological abnormality: Howell Jolly bodies
*remnants of nuclear chromatin normally removed by the spleen
*seen in surgically (splenectomy) or functionally ASPLENIC (sickle cell) patients
RBC morphological abnormality: spherocytes
*small, spherical cells with NO CENTRAL PALLOR
*associated with hereditary spherocytosis or autoimmune hemolytic anemia
normal myeloblast range in bone marrow aspirate
< 5.0
[note - myeloblasts should NEVER be in the peripheral blood !]
normal myeloblast range in a peripheral blood sample
0 [there should NEVER be myeloblasts in the peripheral blood {these are very immature blood cells}]
what is included in a BASIC metabolic panel
sodium
potassium
chloride
CO2
BUN
creatinine
glucose
calcium
note - run on serum
what is included in a COMPREHENSIVE metabolic panel
BMP [sodium, potassium, chloride, CO2, BUN, creatinine, glucose] PLUS:
total protein
albumin
AST
ALT
alkaline phosphatase
total bilirubin
what cell is this? what is its associated pathology?
*acanthocyte (“spur” or “thorn” cells)
*associated with LIVER DISEASE primarily
what cell is this? what is its associated pathology?
*basophilic stippling
*associated with lead toxicity, sideroblastic anemia, and thalassemias
what cell is this? what is its associated pathology?
*howell jolly bodies
*associated with asplenia (splenectomy) or functional asplenia (sickle cell patients)
what cell is this? what is its associated pathology?
*rouleaux
*associated with plasma cell dyscrasias (MGUS, multiple myeloma, plasma cell leukemia)
what cell is this? what is its associated pathology?
*schistocytes
*associated with microangiopathic hemolytic anemias (DIC, TTP, HUS) or mechanical hemolysis (heart valve prosthesis)
what cell is this? what is its associated pathology?
*spherocytes
*associated with hereditary spherocytosis
what cell is this? what is its associated pathology?
*target cells
*associated with thalassemias primarily