The results obtained regarding RBC count (Figure 3), Tables 1 & 2 was statistically significant when measured with the automated method compared to the traditional manual method suggesting the passage of two or more RBC through the "flow cell", which is called "coincidence" causing to obtain a higher number than in the sample [11]. Sysmex XE-5000 RBC Counts vs Manual RBC Counts * Open in new tab Correlation of the automated and manual PMN and MN cell counts was of limited value because the study focused on samples with extremely low cell counts. Of perhaps greater interest and diagnostic usefulness is the performance of the abnormal WBC scattergram flag for the detection Introduction • The red blood cell (RBC) count is the number of red blood cells per unit volume of whole blood. • Normal range of RBCs :-Adults : 4.8-7.2 million (male) and 4.9-5.5 million (female).-Pregnancy: slightly lower than normal adult values.-Children: 3.8-5.5 million.• RBCs are non nucleated, biconcave discs. The red cell membrane is flexible and exhibits a remarkable deformability. Area of square = length x width of one square being counted (RBC = 0.04 mm 2, WBC = 1 mm 2, Platelet = 1 mm 2) # squares counted = total number of squares counted on one side of the hemacytometer (RBC = 5, WBC = 4, Platelets = 1). Example calculations for WBC and RBC If you counted white cells Platelets and RBCs are smaller therefore: (1) you will probably use higher magnification which means you will not be able to see 100% of a corner square, but you will be able to see individual inner squares in the central square, which have additional lines that help you count; (2) Because you'll be counting a smaller area, the cell density required will be larger making it impossible to count all cells in a large (corner) square (i.e. if you count 5 smaller squares in the central square Results: Considering the red blood cell (RBC) and white blood cell (WBC) counts, strong correlations existed between FUS-200 and manual microscopy (r=0.993 vs 0.861), Urised 3 and manual For example, when the red blood cell count of the CBC is performed, an isotonic solution preserves red cell integrity. In contrast, for white blood cell and platelet counts, a lysis diluent is used to remove the numerous red blood cells. CBCs can be performed either by manual counts or, more commonly, by automated analyzers. Slide 5: RBC red blood cell count RBC bath 36-360 fL n × 106 cells/µL Hgb hemoglobin concentration WBC bath 525 nm g/dL Hct hematocrit computed RBC x MCV/10 % MCV mean cell volume derived from RBC histogram # × size of RBC/total RBC fL MCH mean cell hemoglobin computer Hgb/RBC × 10 pg MCHC mean cell hemoglobin concentration By using the CD 3200 with our laboratory-specific rules for agreement between duplicate counts, we would be able to reduce our manual CSF specimen counts from 192 TNC and 192 RBC counts to 2 TNC and 178 RBC counts. For body fluid specimens, our manual counts would be reduced from 130 TNC and 130 RBC counts to 10 TNC and 4 RBC counts. What causes red blood cell count to decrease? A low red blood cell count is a condition known as anemia. Faulty or decreased red blood cell production - due to sickle cell anemia, iron deficiency anemia, vitamin deficiency anemia, and diseases of the bone marrow and stem cells. Excessive destruction of red blood cells. A notation on the report must be made that only 50 white cells were counted. Multiply each percentage x 2. When the WBC is very high (>50,000/ L), a 20
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