Principle of electronic impedance in cell counting. What is it based on?
*NOTE: Beckman vs Sysmex
Purpose of diluent in cell counting baths
“Number of voltage pulses” represents which hematologic parameter ?
Cell count
“Height of voltage pulses” represents which hematologic parameter ?
Cell volume
Define “co-incidence” in hematology
How are histograms created ?
What is “aperture voting ?”
How is Hb value determined on Beckman Coulter ?
How is Flow Cytometry used to study cells ?
Forward light scatter: cell size
Side scatter: cell complexity/ granularity
VCS in Beckman Coulter analyzers
Volume:
Conductive:
Light Scatter:
Which WBCs are included in the 6-part differential on the Sysmex ?
How do Sysmex analyzers differentiate WBCs ?
Significance of increased retic count
Anemia due to red blood cells being destroyed earlier than normal (hemolytic anemia)
3 general causes of increased retic count
How do Beckman Coulter determine retic count ? What parameters are used and how are they measured ?
How do Sysmex analyzers determine retic count ? What parameters are used and how are they measured ?
When would a manual retic count be indicated instead of an automated count ?
What stain is used for manual retic counts ? What does this stain do to retics ?
New methylene blue; causes clumping and staining of residual nucleic acid present in immature cells.
Minimum requirement for a stained red cell to be a retic
Manual staining procedure for retics (dilution, incubation time, etc.)
Manual counting procedure for retics (relative and absolute counts)
What are the allowable ranges (technical accuracy limits) when comparing retic counts on two slides ?
0 - 2%=
2.1 - 5%=
>5% =
Ref: relative retic count (>1 week old)
Ref: absolute retic count (>6 months old)