Diagnostics Flashcards

1
Q

What is ESR

A

Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate

Rate at which red blood cells settle out of suspension in blood plasma, measured under standard conditions

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2
Q

What is CRP

A

CRP = C-reactive protein, made by liver during infection

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3
Q

What do the colours of blood tubes mean

A

Red top - no anticoagulant
Yellow top - gel to speed up clot
Purple top - potassium EDTA
Grey top - have fluoride oxalate (poison)

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4
Q

What is the function of EDTA In purple top tubes

A

Keep the cells alive. Cannot be used for U+E due to potassium content
It is used when measuring cell counts or anything in general to do with the cells

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5
Q

What is the function of fluoride oxalate in grey top tubes

A

Kills red blood cells

glycolysis in red cells - used for glucose measurement as live cells would consume the glucose

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6
Q

What tubes are used for the different tests

A
U+E : serum in yellow/red top
Glucose: plasma in grey top
HBA1c: plasma in purple top
TFT: serum in yellow/red top
 Liver function tests: in yellow/red top
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7
Q

Which tests use no antigoagulant and why

A

U+E : serum in yellow/red top
Blood clots, using up all clotting factors
Clot can be removed, leaving serum

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8
Q

Which tests use anticoagulant and why

A

EDTA or heparin
Clotting factors unused
Blood can be separated into red cells and plasma

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9
Q

What are the layers of a blood sample in a tube with anticoagulant

A
  1. Erythrocytes
  2. Gel barrier
  3. Density gradient fluid
  4. Lymphocyte and monocyte band
  5. Plasma
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10
Q

When should a chemical pathologist be contacted

A

When you want the sample to be rapidly centrifuged out of hours
When you want to measure labile hormones such as insulin
When you urgently need CSF glucose and protein to be measured

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11
Q

How is creatinine used as a marker of renal function

A

marker of glomerular filtration rate.
If it is normal, then the GFR is normal
Very little is absorbed or secreted by the tubules

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12
Q

In what situation would urea levels rise

A

patient is dehydrated but GFR stays the same to the end

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13
Q

Describe liver enzymes

A

Are present in the liver
A tiny amount normally leaks into the blood
In liver disease, more of these enzymes leak into the blood

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14
Q

What needs to be measured in suspected jaundice

A
Liver enzymes
AST (alanine amino-transferase)
GGT 
Albumin (synthesised in liver)
Bilirubin 
Alkaline phosphatase
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15
Q

Describe cardiac enzymes for diagnosis

A

Are present in the heart muscle
During a heart attack, heart muscle is damaged
These enzymes leak into the blood in large amounts
Measure troponin levels

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16
Q

Give examples of cardiac enzymes

A

Troponins
Creatine kinase (CK)
Aspartate amino transferase (AST)
Lactate Dehydrogenase (LDH)

17
Q

What happens to ESR in infection

A

ESR increases

Lots of proteins and inflammatory cells -> red cells settle faster

18
Q

What can creatinine and urea changes be used as a marker for

A

Increases in both mark renal disease

19
Q

What are the 3 main liver enzymes

A
Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) 
Aspartate aminotransferase (AST) 
Alkaline phosphatase (ALP)
20
Q

What other cells, other than hepatocytes, contain alkaline phosphatase?

A

Osteoblasts

21
Q

When may ALP be high

A

After a fracture – osteoblasts use ALP to build more bone

22
Q

What is the first thing you do if a patient presents with heart attack type symptoms?

A

ECG

23
Q

What else can cause heart attack type symptoms

A

A bleeding peptic ulcer

24
Q

What could allow CSF glucose be indicative of

A

meningitis (due to bacteria consuming the glucose)

25
Q

What is found in blue top tubes and what is its function

A

Citrate (anticoagulant)
Add calcium to cause sample to clot, citrate removes calcium -> can time how long clotting takes – measures clotting factor production by liver; must fill tube to top