Lab Maintenance and Blood Sampling Flashcards
What is a centrifuge?
equipment which spins a substance to separate fluid from solid content
- using centripetal force
PCVs, Plasma, Urine sediment
what are the different types of centrifuges?
fixed-angle head
- most common
- specimen in a fixed position - 25-40 degrees from vertical
swing out head
- specimen starts in the vertical position
- as the rotor turns, the specimen swings out
- returns to vertical position when cycle complete
microhaematocrit
- horizontal slots available for capillary tubes
how to ensure safety when using a centrifuge?
do not open whilst still running
always add the plate
make sure samples are balanced
- otherwise spins incorrectly
what centrifugal speeds should we use?
blood - 10,000rpm for 5 mins
urine - 2,000rpm for 5 mins
serum - 2,500rpm for 10-15mins
-> let clot for 15-20min prior
centrifuge maintenance?
clean regularly
check for broken glass
- impact spin
replace rubber ring regularly
place on flat strong surface
normal PCV ranges?
cats - 24-35%
dogs - 35-45%
-> sighthounds 45-55% as athletic
reasons for high PCV?
dehydration - less serum than should be
polycythaemia - produce too many RBCs
acute bleeding
reasons for low PCV?
anaemia
what is a refractometer?
hand-held piece of equipment which measures:
- specific gravity of urine
- total proteins of serum
how do you calibrate a refractometer?
Place 2-3 drops of distilled water on the prism
Hold refractometer up to light source and look down eye piece
Calibrate the refractometer to 1.000 on the USG scale
Lift cover and dry prism surface using a dry tissue
normal total proteins ranges?
cats - 66-86g/l
dogs - 55-74g/l
what are the types of blood tubes?
colour? anticoagulant? test?
red - EDTA - haematology
orange - lithium heparin - biochemistry
yellow - potassium oxalate with sodium fluoride - glucose
purple - sodium citrate - coagulation
white/brown (with gel) - plain - serum
where can you collect a blood sample?
cats
- jugular
- medial saphenous
- cephalic
dogs
- jugular
- lateral saphenous
- dorsal pedal
- cephalic
- marginal ear
birds
- jugular
- brachial
- basilic
- medial metatarsal
snakes
- ventral coccygeal
- dorsal coccygeal
equipment needed for taking bloods?
prep solution
suitable needle and syringe
relevant blood tubes
pros/cons of different needle sizes for blood samples?
large needles (eg green 21G)
- better flow
- minimal pressure needed
- no haemolysis
- increased bleeding risk
small needle (eg blue 23G or orange 25G)
- haemolysis likely
- lower bleeding risk
- higher pressure needed
- slower flow - higher clotting risk
rule of thumb:
- large dogs - green
- small dogs/cats - blue
- exotics - orange