Interpreting Clinical Lab Data - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 55
About This Presentation
Title:

Interpreting Clinical Lab Data

Description:

Bone marrow: many banded forms are present; neutrophilia with lots of bands ... B cells are not only produced in the bone marrow but also mature there. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1982
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 56
Provided by: lomal
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Interpreting Clinical Lab Data


1
Interpreting Clinical Lab Data
  • Robert L. Wilkins, PhD, RRT
  • Professor of CPS
  • Loma Linda University

2
Interpreting Clinical Lab Data
  • Objectives
  • 1. Identify the characteristics and function of
    each type of leukocyte.
  • 2. Identify the significance of comparing the WBC
    count to the neutrophil count in patients with
    pneumonia.
  • 3. Identify common causes for increases and
    decreases in the neutrophil count.
  • 4. State how the rule of three is useful for
    interpretation of the RBC count and indices.

3
Divisions of the Clinical Lab
  • Hematology
  • Complete blood count
  • WBC count
  • Platelets
  • RBC count
  • Chemistry
  • Electrolytes
  • Potassium
  • Sodium
  • Total CO2
  • Chloride

4
Divisions of the Clinical Lab
  • Microbiology
  • Sputum gram stain
  • Sputum culture and sensitivity
  • Pleural fluid culture and sensitivity
  • Blood Bank
  • - blood typing and storage

5
CELL MORPHOLOGY
6
Cell Morhphology (neutrophil)
  • Segmented neutrophil (40-70 of WBCs)
  • Life span of about 10 days
  • Moves from bone marrow to blood to tissues
  • Mature more quickly under stressful conditions
  • Primary defense for bacterial infections

7
Cell Morhphology (neutrophil)
8
The Neutrophil
  • Once in the peripheral blood, it can be in the
    circulating pool (CP) or the marginated pool (MP)
    (approx. 50)
  • cells in MP not counted in CBC
  • Shift from the MP to the CP can occur with
    stress, trauma, catecholamines, etc.
  • This results in a transient leukocytosis
  • Such leukocytosis can last 4 to 6 hours

9
(No Transcript)
10
The Neutrophil
  • Present in band and segmented forms
  • Bands make up lt 5 of circulating neutrophils
    normally
  • Left shift is seen as an increase in the number
    of bands and is common with acute infection
  • Main function is to locate, ingest, and kill
    bacteria and other foreign invaders

11
Cause of Neutrophilia
  • Pathologic
  • Bacterial infection
  • Certain viruses and fungi
  • Inflammatory responses to tissue death
  • Burns
  • Snake bites
  • Drugs
  • steroids
  • lithium

12
Causes of Neutrophilia (cont.)
  • Physiologic
  • Pseudoneutrophilia (shift of cells from the MP to
    CP)
  • Catecholamines
  • Acute stress
  • Other inflammatory responses
  • Neoplastic growth
  • Metabolic disorders

13
Pools of Neutrophils
  • Bone marrow many banded forms are present
    neutrophilia with lots of bands suggest bone
    marrow was source
  • Circulating Pool used to deal with day to day
    invasion of the body by organisms
  • Marginated Pool no bands respond to physiologic
    stimulation

14
Causes of Neutropenia
  • Decreased Production of WBCs
  • bone marrow diseases
  • malignancies that affect the bone marrow
  • Increased Neutrophil Destruction
  • overwhelming infection
  • certain bacteria
  • immune reactions
  • Pseudoneutropenia (shift of cells from CP to MP)
  • viral infections
  • hypothermia

15
Cell morphology (Eosinophil)
  • Segmented eosinophil
  • Life span 14 days
  • Spends little time in the blood before it locates
    in the skin, GI tract, or respiratory tract
  • Only 1 of mature cells are located in blood

16
The Eosinophil
  • Also function as phagocytes but appear to be less
    potent than neutrophil
  • Drawn to sites of hypersensitivity reactions by
    mast cell chemotactic factors
  • Often found in sputum of asthmatics
  • May play a role in pathogenesis of lung dz
  • Play a role in parasitic infections

17
The Basophils
  • Mature basophil
  • Least common of WBCs (lt 2)
  • Nucleus does not always segment
  • Increase in response to same conditions that
    cause eosinophils to respond

18
The Monocytes
  • Also not common in circulating blood
  • Stay in blood for about 70 hours
  • Become macrophages in tissue and live for several
    months or longer

19
The Monocytes
  • Primary role is phagocytosis
  • Play large role in ingesting cellular debris
  • Become activated when direct contact with
    microorganisms occurs
  • Activated cell has greater motility, enzyme
    activity and killing capacity (causes fever)
  • Also play a role in immunity

20
The Lymphocytes
  • May mature into B or T cells
  • Main function is antigen recognition and immune
    response
  • Life span quite varied (up to two years)
  • Can pass back and forth between blood and tissues

21
Lymphocytes B T types
  • B cells are not only produced in the bone marrow
    but also mature there.
  • However, the precursors of T cells leave the bone
    marrow and mature in the thymus (which accounts
    for their designation)

22
Types of Lymphocytes
  • B lymphocytes (or B cells) are most effective
    against bacteria their toxins plus a few
    viruses
  • T lymphocytes (or T cells) recognize destroy
    body cells gone awry, including virus-infected
    cells cancer cells.
  • T cells come in two types helper cells and
    suppressor cells normally the helper cells
    predominate.

23
Lymphocyte Count Decreased
  • Decreased
  • AIDS
  • Bone Marrow suppression
  • Aplastic Anemia
  • Steroids
  • Neurologic Disorders
  • Multiple Sclerosis
  • Myasthenia Gravis
  • Gullain Barre Syndrome

24
Lymphocyte count Increased
  • Influenza
  • Pertussis
  • Tuberculosis
  • Mumps
  • Cytomegalovirus Infection
  • Infectious Mononucleosis
  • Infectious Hepatitis
  • Viral pneumonia

25
Interpreting the CBC
  • What is total white cell count?
  • If elevated (gt11,000), what type of WBC is the
    culprit?
  • Is it the neutrophils, eosinophils, lymphocytes,
    basophils, or monocytes?
  • Marked leukocytosis is usually due to neutrophils
    or lymphocytes.

26
Interpreting the CBC
27
Interpreting the CBC
  • If the neutrophils are causing the leukocytosis,
    compare the neutrophil to total WBC.
  • The neutrophils indicates the severity of the
    infection the total WBC reflects the quality of
    the immune system

28
Interpreting the CBC (Case 1)
  • 85 yr old female with pneumonia
  • Total WBC is 11,500
  • Neutrophil 80 (9200) bands 5
  • This indicates that a severe infection is present
    but the immune system is unable to respond
    appropriately.
  • Prognosis poor.

29
Interpreting the CBC (Case 2)
  • 5 yr old male with pneumonia
  • WBC 18,000
  • Neutrophils 60 (10,800)
  • Marked leukocytosis and normal range for
    neutrophils indicates moderate infection but
    excellent immune system response
  • Excellent prognosis

30
Interpreting the CBC (Case 3)
  • 10 yr old male admitted for pneumonia
  • WBC 16,000
  • neutrophils 75 (12,000) (1800-7500)
  • Bands 5 (800) (0-100)
  • Eosinophils 1 (160) (0-600)
  • Lymphocytes 10 (1600) (900-4500)
  • Basophils 0 (0) (0-100)
  • Monocytes 3 (480) (90-1000)

31
Interpreting the CBC (Case 3)
  • Interpretation
  • neutrophilia probably due to bacterial pneumonia
  • left shift indicative of severe infection
  • the source of the neutrophils is the bone marrow
    since many bands are present

32
Case Study 4
  • 20 yr old male admitted following MVA
  • WBC 14,500 75 neutrophils 1 bands
  • Leukocytosis due to neutrophilia
  • History and low per cent of bands suggest
    pseudoneutrophilia
  • Due to liberation of marginated neutrophils in
    the intravascular system

33
Interpreting the CBC
  • What is indicated by leukopenia?
  • 1. Bone marrow failure
  • cancer e.g. leukemia, lymphoma
  • 2. Overwhelming infection
  • severe pneumonia pt who has poor immune system
    and cant produce enough WBCs
  • 3. Shift of neutrophils to MNP (viral infections
    and hypothermia)

34
Platelet Count
  • Normal count is 140,000 to 440,000/mm3
  • Life span of about 10 days
  • Low platelet counts (thrombocytopenia) cause
    excessive bleeding
  • Thrombycytopenia is common with the use of
    heparin, DIC, bone marrow disease, liver failure
    and sepsis

35
Platelet
36
Platelet (Activated)
37
(No Transcript)
38
(No Transcript)
39
(No Transcript)
40
(No Transcript)
41
(No Transcript)
42
(No Transcript)
43
Red Blood Cells
44
Red Blood Cells (Erythrocytes)
  • Produced in the bone marrow
  • Life span of about 120 days
  • Primary function is gas transport
  • Immature version has nucleus and is called a
    reticulocyte

45
Interpreting the RBC count
  • Normal values
  • Men 4.2 5.4 million/mm3
  • Women 3.6 5.0 million/mm3
  • Anemia
  • abnormal Decrease in RBC count
  • - decreased production
  • - increased destruction (hemolysis)
  • - blood loss

46
Interpreting the RBC count
  • 3. Increased RBC count Polycythemia
  • A. Primary
  • B. Secondary
  • living at altitude
  • chronic lung/heart disease
  • tobacco use/carbon monoxide
  • C. Relative Polycythemia
  • dehydration

47
Red Blood Cell Indices
  • Mean Corpuscular Volume (MCV)
  • Volume occupied by a single RBC
  • Increase in MCV is known as Macrocytic anemia.
  • Decrease in MCV is known as Microcytic anemia.
  • Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin Concentration
  • (MCHC)
  • Measure of the concentration of hemoglobin in an
    average RBC
  • Decrease in MCHC is known as Hypochromic anemia
  • Normal is known as Normochromic anemia.

48
Red Blood Cell Indices
  • Normocytic anemias
  • Blood loss
  • Hemolytic anemia
  • Microcytic anemias (lt80 fL)
  • Iron deficiency
  • Macrocytic anemias (gt100 fL)
  • Folic acid deficiency
  • Vitamin B12 deficiency
  • Some COPD patients
  • femtoliters

49
Red Blood Cell Indices
50
Hematocrit
51
The RULE of Three
  • Applies to normocytic, normochromic erythrocytes
    only
  • Useful to detect laboratory error in measuring
    the Hb, HCT, and RBC count
  • 3 times the RBC count should Hb
  • 3 times Hb should Hct

52
The RULE of Three
  • RBC 3.0 x 1012 3 x 3 9
  • Hb 9.2 g/dL 3 x 9.2 27.6
  • Hct 28

53
Interpreting the Red Blood Cells
  • CBC Results Normals
  • RBC (x1012/L) 4.2 4.2-5.4
  • Hgb (g/dL) 10.6 ? 11.5-15.5
  • Hct 34.9 ? 38-47
  • MCV (?m3) 77.0 ? 80-96
  • MCHC 30.4 ? 32-36
  • Interpretation Microcytic, hypochromic anemia
    rule of 3 does not apply

54
Reticulocyte Count
  • Normal values
  • 0.5 1.5 of RBC
  • Helpful to identify cause of Anemia
  • Increase indicates Anemia is due to Blood loss
  • Decrease indicates Anemia is due to Bone marrow
    disease

55
Bibliography
  • Steine-Martin Clinical Hematology, 2nd edition,
    Lippincott, Philadelphia, 1998.
  • Kaplan Clinical Chemistry, 4th edition, Mosby,
    St. Louis, 2003.
  • Wilkins Clinical Assessment in Respiratory Care,
    5th edition, Mosby, St. Louis, 2005.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com