Introduction to Clinical Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

What is clinical pathology?

A

study of disease in the clinical environment by the use of laboratory assays

pattern recognition!

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2
Q

What are the main 5 main tests done in clinical pathology?

A
  1. hematology - CBC, blood smear examination
  2. clinical chemistry - biochemistry profile
  3. coagulation tests
  4. blood gas analysis
  5. endocrinology
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3
Q

What is characteristic of a valid test?

A

measures the parameter (analyte) of interest over a range of values with minimal interferences

  • abnormal values should have a strong association with a disease or condition with few false positive and negative results
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4
Q

No laboratory test is perfect. What is done to overcome this?

A

several tests are often used in combination to diagnose or categorize a disease

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5
Q

What do test sensitivity and specificity depend on?

A

prevalence of a disease

NO test has 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity
(>70% is pretty good, there is always a margin of error)

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6
Q

What is test sensitivity? What happens if the sensitivity of a PCR for lymphoma is 91% and 100 animals with lymphoma are tested?

A

ability of a test to detect patients who truly have the disease (true positives) and rules out false negatives

  • 91% have a positive result
  • 9% have false negatives
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7
Q

In what tests is it most important to have high sensitivity? Why?

A

screening tests

negative result with a highly sensitive test will effectively rule out a disease

tests with high sensitivity are best used to rule OUT disease (SnOUT)

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8
Q

What is test specificity? What happens if the specificity of a test is 95% and 100 animals are tested?

A

ability of a test to detect patients that truly do not have a disease (true negatives)

  • 95% of animals will have negative results
  • 5% of animals will have false positive results
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9
Q

What happens when a test has a high specificity?

A

non-diseased patient is more likely to test negative

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10
Q

In what tests is it important to have high specificity? Why?

A

confirmatory tests

few non-diseased patients will incorrectly test positive (false positive)

high specificity rules in disease (SpIN) - confirms diagnosis

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11
Q

SnOUT = _______
SpIN = _______

A

Sensitive test when Negative result rules OUT disease

Specific test when Positive result rules IN disease

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12
Q

How should each lab have its reference intervals?

A

they should have their own RI for each species and their own lab location/environment

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13
Q

How are reference intervals preferably established?

A

use 60-120 samples with the data analyzed to fit a normal (Gaussian) distribution - the typical values seen in 95% of healthy animals

  • 2.5% of healthy animals will be below the RI
  • 2.5% of healthy animals will be above the RI
  • 1/20 healthy animals will have a result outside of the RI
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14
Q

What is important to still note about results within the reference interval (WRI)?

A

may not necessarily be “normal”

  • may not be normal for a given disease process
  • common to have 2 disease processes “pushing” and “pulling” the result to be within the RI
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15
Q

What are the most common pre-analytical error, analytical error, and post-analytical error?

A

PRE-ANALYTICAL - collection of sample
ANALYTICAL - testing the sample
POST-ANALYTICAL - human error in reporting results

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16
Q

What are quality control (QC) programs?

A

involves analyzing quality control materials (QCM) that have pre-determined concentrations of an analyte, where each laboratory establishes it allowable error

17
Q

What indicates a test is highly precise?

A

same result with multiple runs or tightly clustered results

  • can be precise, but inaccurate
18
Q

A 9 y/o MC Australian Shepherd presented to an emergency clinic after ingesting an entire bag of white chocolate Hershey’s kisses. Physical exam showed BCS 5/9, attitude was BAR, TPR 100.5 degrees F, 100 bpm, 32 breaths/min, and slightly pale MM with CRT < 2 sec.

However, venipuncture from the jugular vein was collected into an EDTA tube and run through an in-house hematology analyzer, showing a hematocrit of 0.11% (RI = 28-35%). Is it time to panic yet?

A

NO - physical and history are not consistent with the findings, as an animal with a 0.11% hematocrit would likely be dead

(PCV was not spun before being put in the hematology analyzer so it was not read correctly - reran and results showed a hematocrit of 22%)

19
Q

What are the most common indications of the following patterns?

  • azotemia + urine specific gravity of unconcentrated urine
  • azotemia + concentrated urine
  • stress leukogram
A
  • renal disease
  • dehydration
  • glucocorticoid (cortisone/prednisone)

pattern recognition is critical for making diagnoses