scholarly journals Peripheral Blood Examination Findings in SARS-CoV-2 Infection

2020 ◽  
Vol 154 (3) ◽  
pp. 319-329 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alia Nazarullah ◽  
Christine Liang ◽  
Andrew Villarreal ◽  
Russell A Higgins ◽  
Daniel D Mais

Abstract Objectives Peripheral blood abnormalities in severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) have not been fully elucidated. We report qualitative and quantitative peripheral blood findings in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients and compare them with a control group. Methods We reviewed electronic medical records, complete blood counts, peripheral blood smears, and flow cytometry data in 12 patients with SARS-CoV-2. These were compared with 10 control patients with symptoms suspicious for SARS-CoV-2 but who tested negative. Results No significant differences were noted in blood counts, except that absolute lymphopenia was present frequently in the control group (P < .05). Acquired Pelger-Huët anomaly (APHA) was noted in all COVID-19 cases, in most cases affecting over 5% of granulocytes. This contrasted with APHA in only 50% of control cases, affecting fewer than 5% of granulocytes in all cases (P < .05). Monolobate neutrophils were exclusive to COVID-19 cases. COVID-19 patients had greater frequency of plasmacytoid lymphocytes (P < .05). Flow cytometry data revealed absolute CD3+ T-cell count reduction in 6 of 7 patients; all of them required mechanical ventilation. Conclusions Lymphopenia was infrequent in our COVID-19 cohort; however, flow cytometric analysis revealed absolute T-cell count reduction in most cases. COVID-19 cases had significant APHA with monolobate neutrophils and plasmacytoid lymphocytes as compared to controls.

2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (5) ◽  
pp. 221-231
Author(s):  
Muhamed Katica ◽  
Nedzad Gradascevic

The laboratory rat, as important biomedical model, was often fed with unconventional diet usually made up of products from the bakery industry. Such diet consisted of insufficient caloric and nutritionally unbalanced meals could cause unreliable results in biomedical research. The study investigates the effects of malnutrition on the haematological profile of rats. The study is performed on Wistar male and female rats which were fed for 4 weeks exclusively with bakery products ad libidum. The following hematological parameters were observed in peripheral blood smears: red blood cell count, content of haemoglobin, haematocrit, MCV, MCH, MCHC, white blood cell count, differential blood count, diameter of red blood cells, as well as the presence of atypical forms of red blood cells. Despite there were no statistically significant differences in overall haematological results (p > 0.05, with > 0.05), the significant part of obtained results were below physiological limits (HGB, MCHC and MCH). Other haematological parameters, including white blood corpuscles were kept in physiological limits, except for mild neutrophils in males. Also, the forms of anulocytes and spherocytes were recorded in peripheral blood smears. The results indicated the beginning of normocytic hypochromic anaemia which was caused by unbalanced meals.


2019 ◽  
Vol 153 (2) ◽  
pp. 266-273
Author(s):  
Estafani Rivas ◽  
Fred V Plapp ◽  
Wei Cui

Abstract Objectives We wanted to evaluate the effectiveness of flow cytometry immunophenotyping (FCI) as a screening test for patients with leukocytosis and cytopenia. Methods We identified 320 patients during August 2016 to December 2016 and evaluated FCI and morphology of peripheral blood smears (PBSs). Results The most common indications for FCI included history of hematologic malignancy (HHM, n = 126), leukocytosis (n = 80), and cytopenia (n = 53). Positive FCI rate was low with a range of 4.4% to 12.5% in patients with absolute neutrophilia regardless of HHM, if cases with circulating blasts were excluded. Patients with absolute lymphocytosis had a 93% positive FCI rate. Patients with HHM and pancytopenia showed a higher incidence of positive FCI findings than patients without HHM and with isolated cytopenia. PBS morphology correlated strongly with FCI (P = .0001). Conclusion PBS evaluation is an accurate and cost-effective screening test. FCI for patients with mature neutrophilia and isolated cytopenia has a very low yield.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 4157-4157
Author(s):  
Nagender Mankan ◽  
Mohammad Razaq ◽  
Yelena Patsiornik ◽  
Shafkat Hussain ◽  
Gloria Fernandez

Abstract Background Peripheral blood smears from finger stick specimens normally show a variable number of platelet clumps. This is believed to be due to platelet activation during the preparation and exposure of glycoprotein Gp Iib/IIIa receptors. Congenital lack of Gp Iib/IIIa (CD41/61) such as seen in Glanzman’s thrombasthenia is characterized by presence of single unclumped platelets in peripheral blood smears. Gp Iib/IIIa antagonists such as Tirofiban cause Glanzman’s thrombasthenia-like defect and would be expected to inhibit platelet clumping in peripheral blood smears. Cardiologists, for the treatment of acute coronary syndrome, increasingly use Tirofiban or other Gp Iib/IIIa blocker. It is given intravenously and has a short half-life. It is thought to be particularly effective because of inhibition of the final common pathway of platelet aggregation. Methodology/results We retrospectively analyzed from January 2000 to Feb 2005, blood smears from finger stick preparations of 35 patients on Tirofiban and 35 controls, who had normal platelet count, for the presence of platelet clumps. The Tirofiban group was referred to the hematology service by cardiologists, mostly for workup of anemia or presence of hypercoagulable state. The control group was patients in the Hematology- Oncology outpatient, who had diagnosis of non-myeloproliferative disorder. Only patients with normal platelet count were included. Slides were prepared from patients while they were on Tirofiban infusion. This information was based on chart review and computer records. All 70 slides were blinded. Hematology fellows under the supervision of hematology attending physicians counted 200 platelets on each slide at 50x magnification. Platelets were classified as single unclumped platelets, platelets in clumps of 2, 3, 4, or 5 and over. More than 90% of platelets were single unclumped in 28 of 35 patients on Tirofiban, while more than 90% of platelets were single unclumped in only 2 of 35 patients in the control group. Conclusion GpIIb/IIIa antagonists are increasingly used for patients with acute coronary syndrome. The inhibition of platelet clumping in peripheral blood smears of patients on these agents has not been studied. We found a significant decrease of platelet clumping in patients on Tirofiban as compared to controls. This is an example of utilization of knowledge of congenital defect and iatrogenic effect of medication, for possible patient use. Further study is needed to confirm this observation and correlate it with the clinical benefit in patients with acute coronary syndrome. The possibility of GpIIb/IIIa resistance may also need to be looked into. This will be a simple, inexpensive test that may be used to correlate with response or possible need for dose adjustment. This is an extension of a study of 20 patients, which was accepted as an abstract, at the annual American College of Cardiology meeting, in March 2005 in Florida. Tirofiban (35) Control (35) Number of patients with >90% single unclumped platelets 28 2 Number of patients with <90% single unclumped platelets 7 33


2016 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel J. Rowan ◽  
Valentina Logunova ◽  
Peter van Tuinen ◽  
Horatiu Olteanu ◽  
Jess F. Peterson

Circulating tumor cells are rare in peripheral blood smears. We report the case of a patient with circulating breast carcinoma cells resembling circulating myeloid blasts and provide a brief review of the literature. Peripheral blood smears and a bone marrow aspirate were examined morphologically and by flow cytometry and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Bone marrow histology in conjunction with immunohistochemical stains was also evaluated. A population of atypical cells with blast-like morphology was present in the peripheral blood. Flow cytometry showed a 9% population of CD45 dim positive, CD13 partial positive, and CD15 variably positive cells. Peripheral blood FISH analysis revealed deletion 7q, gain of 8q, and deletions 16q and 17q in 32.5% to 36% of 200 interphase cells analyzed. The bone marrow biopsy showed cohesive groups of cytokeratin AE1/AE3 positive cells. Our report demonstrates that circulating carcinoma cells can mimic a high-grade myeloid neoplasm morphologically and by flow cytometry and FISH analysis.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kokou S. Dogbevi ◽  
Paul Gordon ◽  
Kimberly L. Branan ◽  
Bryan Khai D. Ngo ◽  
Kevin B. Kiefer ◽  
...  

Effective staining of peripheral blood smears which enhances the contrast of intracellular components and biomarkers is essential for the accurate characterization, diagnosis, and monitoring of various diseases such as malaria.


2021 ◽  
Vol 80 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 423.2-424
Author(s):  
A. Floudas ◽  
M. Canavan ◽  
T. McGarry ◽  
V. Krishna ◽  
S. Nagpal ◽  
...  

Background:Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a progressive erosive autoimmune disease that affects 1% of the world population. Anti-citrullinated protein autoantibodies (ACPA) are routinely used for the diagnosis of RA, however 20-30% of patients are ACPA negative. ACPA status is a delineator of RA disease endotypes with similar clinical manifestation but potentially different pathophysiology. Elucidating the underlying mechanisms of disease pathogenesis could inform a treat to target approach for both ACPA-positive and ACPA-negative RA patients.Objectives:To identify peripheral blood and synovial tissue immune population differences that associate with RA disease endotype.To identify unique RA patient synovial tissue gene signatures and enriched pathways that correlate with ACPA status.Methods:Detailed high dimensionality flow cytometric analysis with supervised and unsupervised algorithm analysis of ACPApos and ACPAneg RA patient peripheral blood and synovial tissue single cell suspensions. Ex vivo peripheral blood and synovial tissue T cell stimulation and cytokine production characterisation. RNAseq analysis with specific pathway enrichment analysis of APCApos and ACPAneg RA patient synovial tissue biopsies.Results:Detailed profiling based on high dimensionality flow cytometric analysis of key peripheral blood and synovial tissue immune populations including B cells, T follicular helper (Tfh) cells, T peripheral helper cells (Tph) and CD4 T cell proinflammatory cytokine responses with supervised and unsupervised algorithm analysis revealed unique RA patient peripheral blood B cell and Tfh cell profiles. ACPApos RA patients were characterised by significantly (*P=0.03) increased frequency of Tfh (CXCR5+CD4+) cells and distinct clustering influenced by increased switched (IgD-CD27+) and DN (IgD-CD27-) memory B cells compared to APCAneg RA patients. Surprisingly synovial tissue B cell subpopulation distribution was similar between ACPAneg and ACPApos RA patients, with significant accumulation of switched and double negative memory B cells, highlighting a key role for specific B cell subsets in both disease endotypes. Interestingly, synovial tissue CD4 T cell proinflammatory cytokine (TNF-α, IFN-γ, IL-2, GM-CSF, IL-17A, IL-22, IL-4) production was markedly different between ACPAneg and APCApos RA patients with hierarchical clustering and PCA analysis revealing endotype specific cytokine profiles with ACPAneg RA patient synovial T cells showing increased TNF-α (P=0.01) expression. RNAseq analysis of RA patient synovial tissue revealed significant disease endotype specific gene signatures with specific enrichment for B cell receptor signalling and T cell specific pathways in ACPApos compared to ACPAneg RA patients. Additionally, significantly different chemokine receptor expression based on RA patient ACPA status was observed with increased CXCR3 (P<0.001), CCR7 (P=0.002), and CCR2 (P=0.004) but decreased CXCR7 (P=0.007) expression in APCApos compared to ACPAneg RA patient synovial biopsies.Conclusion:ACPA status associates with unique synovial tissue immune cell and gene profile signatures highlighting differences in the underlying immunological mechanisms involved, therefore reinforcing the need for a treat to target approach for both endotypes of RA.Figure 1.RNAseq analysis of synovial tissue biopsies revealed specific T cell related pathway enrichment in ACPA positive compared to ACPA negative RA patients (n=50, analysis performed with the DESq2 and pathfindeR pipelines in R).Disclosure of Interests:Achilleas Floudas: None declared, Mary Canavan: None declared, Trudy McGarry Employee of: Novartis, Vinod Krishna Employee of: Janssen, Sunil Nagpal Employee of: Janssen, GSK, Douglas Veale Speakers bureau: Abbvie, Janssen, Novartis, MSD, Pfizer, UCB, Consultant of: Abbvie, Janssen, Novartis, MSD, Pfizer, UCB, Grant/research support from: Janssen, Abbvie, Pfizer, UCB, Ursula Fearon Speakers bureau: Abbvie, Grant/research support from: Janssen, Abbvie, Pfizer, UCB


2002 ◽  
Vol 116 (3) ◽  
pp. 503-503 ◽  
Author(s):  
Glen A. Kennedy ◽  
Jennifer L. Curnow ◽  
Julie Gooch ◽  
Bronwyn Williams ◽  
Peter Wood ◽  
...  

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