veterinary hematology - an introduction gittan gröndahl, dvm, phd

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Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Page 1: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

Veterinary Hematology- An introduction

Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

Page 2: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

3

B lo o d V o lum e in A n im a ls in % o f B o d y W e ig h t

5,4

5,6

6,5

6,5

6,5

6,5

6,7

6,7

7

7,2

7,3

8,2

8,5

8,8

10,5

10,5

0 2 4 6 8 10 12

Rabbit

P ig

C attle – cow

Goat

Horse – co ldblood

Sheep

Rat

M onkey

C at

Guinea pig

C attle – o lder calf

Hamster

M ouse

Dog

C attle – young calf

Horse – w armblood

What Is Blood, and How Much Blood Is There?

1

2 3

Page 3: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

4

Red Blood Cells – The Oxygen Carriers

Hemoglobin

Erythropoeisis:rubriblast – prorubricyte – basophilic rubricyte – polychromic rubricyte – normochromic rubricyte – metarubricyte – reticulocyte – mature erythrocyte

100 h100 h

Page 4: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

5

Red Blood Cells – The Oxygen Carriers

Erythropoeitin (EPO)

Hypoxia

Page 5: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

6

Red Blood Cells – Measurements

Hematocrit / PCV

RBC

Hemoglobin

Page 6: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Red Blood Cells – Physiological Alterations

HGBRBCHCT

growing animals...

Page 7: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

8

Red Blood Cells – Physiological Alterations

HGBRBCHCT

exercise, fear, stress...

Page 8: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

9

Red Blood Cells – Physiological Alterations

HGBRBCHCT

dehydration, shock, high altitude, chronic lung disease, anabolic steroids...

Page 9: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

10

Red Blood Cells – Physiological Alterations

HGBRBCHCT

anaemia, anaesthesia, sedation, late pregnancy...

Page 10: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

11

Red Blood Cells – Artefactual Alterations

HCT

hemolysis, too little blood,

extended storage in EDTA...

Page 11: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

12

Red Blood Cells – Regenerative Signs

Reticulocytes

If HCT <30% (dog) or <20% (cat) count reticulocytes

Not normally seen in horses, cattle, sheep, goats

0-5% in cats

2-4% in rat, mouse, guinea pig, rabbit

0-2% in dogs and swine

Page 12: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

13

Red Blood Cells – Regenerative Signs

Not even seen in regenerative anemia

in horses

Instead, macrocytes are released

RDW MCV

Reticulocytes –never in horses!

Page 13: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

14

Red Blood Cells – Regenerative Signs

Nucleated RBC

Polychromasia variable coloration

Anisocytosis greater variation in cell size, RDW

Page 14: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

15

Red Blood Cells – Regenerative Signs

Howell-Jolly bodies nuclear remnants

Basophilic punctuation

Macrocytosislarge cells, MCV

Page 15: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

16

So – What Is This?

African Gray Parrot RBC

Llama RBC

Page 16: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

17

Red Blood Cells – Number and size in mammals

Page 17: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Red Blood Cells – Mean Cell Volume (MCV)

Macrocytosis - MCV Often in regenerative anemia

Microcytosis - MCV Often sign of iron deficiency,

such as chronic blood loss

Used in classification of anemias:

Page 18: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

19

Red Blood Cells – MCHC, Mean Cell HGB Concentration

(Hyperchromic - MCHC )Artefact!

Hypochromic - MCHC In acute and chronic blood loss,

hemolytic anemia or iron deficiency

Normochromic - MCHC normal

Used in classification of anemias:

Page 19: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

20

Blood Groups in Animals

All animals species have their specific blood group system.

Cross-matching!

1. Blood transfusions

2. Incompatibility between dam and offspring

Page 20: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

21

Anemia – Too Low Oxygen Carriage Capacity

Signs of anemia:

Pale in eye and mouthVigor and strength

Appetite Heart rate

Respiratory rate Laboured breath

Blood, bleedings, hematomas

Icterus

Page 21: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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1. Blood loss (regenerative anemia)

Coagulopathies

Gastrointestinal hemorrhage

Platelet disorders

Splenic rupture

Trauma/surgery

Anemia – General Causes

Page 22: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

23

Anemia – General Causes

2. Blood destruction / hemolysis (regenerative

anemia)

Fragmentation

Immune-mediated disease

Infections

Intrinsic RBC defects

Toxicities

Page 23: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

24

Anemia – General Causes

3. Decreased / ineffective production of RBC

(non-regenerative anemia)

Anemia of inflammatory disease

Aplastic or hypoplastic anemias

Metabolic or endocrine disease

Neoplastic disease

Nutritional deficiency anemias (e.g., iron, copper, folate, cobalt)

Page 24: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Platelets – The Sealers and Healers

First line of defense in damage to vessels

cow

cat

Important in inflammation and wound healing

Page 25: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Platelets – Thrombocytopenia – PLT

Production Destruction

Consumption

Caused by:

Signs, if PLT <20-50 x 109/L:

HematomasBleedings

dog

horse

Page 26: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Platelets – Thrombocytopenia – PLT

Certain medications

(antibiotics, NSAID,

hormones)

Some infections (FIV, FeLV,

BVDV, EIA, Ehrlichia etc)

Hemolytic anemia

DIC – Disseminated

intravascular coagulation

Vaccination

Malignant cells

Page 27: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

28

Platelets – Thrombocytopenia – PLT

Platelet aggregates

False Low PLT Caused by:

Platelets and fibrin clumps

Page 28: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Platelets – Thrombocytosis – PLT

Surgery or trauma

Chronic bleedingsAcute/chronic infections or inflammatory

conditions

Cushing’s disease

Corticosteroid therapy

Myeloproliferative

disorders

Caused by:

Page 29: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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White Blood Cells – The defence troops

Defence

Cleaning up

Inflammatory reactions

Signalling system:

Cytokines

Receptors

Page 30: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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White Blood Cells – The defence troops

First line of defence

Phagocytosis

Toxic proteinsParasites

Allergic reactions

Allergic reactionsHistamin,

heparin

InterplayPhagocytosis

AntibodiesCell destruction

Page 31: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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White Blood Cells – Physiological Alterations

breed,

sex...

WBC/

Page 32: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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White Blood Cells – Physiological Alterations

exercise, stress,

excitation...

young animals.

..

late pregnancy, feeding...

WBC

Page 33: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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White Blood Cells – Artefactual Alterations

WBC

extended storage...

Cells from very sick Cells from very sick animals animals

are the most sensitiveare the most sensitive

Page 34: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Granulocytes – Neutrophils

White, small pink granules

White/pink, no granules,

”knobby” nuclei

White, small stronger pink granules

White, no granules

Page 35: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Granulocytes – Band Neutrophils

Regenerative left shift

Neutrophilia with >1,0 x 109/L of Bands for dogs and cats

>0,3 x 109/ L of Bands for horses and cattle

Bands = Left Shift

Page 36: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Granulocytes – Band Neutrophils

Degenerative left shift

Normal or Low WBC count with significant left shift

or Band neutrophils ~ Segmented neutrophils

(with any WBC count)

Bands = Left Shift

Poor

Prognosis!

Page 37: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Granulocytes – Toxic Neutrophils

Segmented, normal

Segmented with toxic change

Band, normalBand with toxic change

Basophilic discoloration, foaming, Döhle bodies, toxic granules

Guarded

Prognosis!

Page 38: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Granulocytes – Eosinophils

Very large globular orange

granules

Small rod-shaped orange granules

Many small round orange granules

Marked variation within and between

individual dogs

Gray, no granules, vacuoles

Page 39: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Granulocytes – Basophils

Small deep purple granules.

Low numbers.

Small oval granules, pale lavender. Rare.

No granules, ribbon-like nucleus,

gray-lavender. Rare.

Small deep purple granules. Low numbers.

Page 40: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Lymphocytes

Slightly larger

Small, dense chromatin

Small, dense chromatin

Quite variable

Page 41: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Lymphocytes -Reactive and Granular

Larger, coarse chromatin, deep blue cytoplasm

Associated with immune response

Small pink granules

Reactive lymphocytes

Granular lymphocytes

Page 42: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Monocytes

Extremely variable in appearance in all animals

Page 43: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

44

Avian Hemogram

Page 44: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Dogs’ Hemogram

Stress (cortico-steroids)

WBC

Neutro

No left shift

Lymph

Eos

Mono

Excitement (adrenaline = epinephrine)

Not so much change

All cells ()

Inflammation

WBC

Left shift if >1 x 109/L bands

Neutro (10-30)

Page 45: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Cats’ Hemogram

Stress (cortico-steroids)

WBC

Neutro

No left shift

Lymph N/

Eos

Excitement (adrenaline = epinephrine)

Common reaction

Lymph

Inflammation

WBC (25-40)

Left shift if >1 x 109/L bands

Neutro

Page 46: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Horses’ Hemogram

Stress (cortico-steroids)

WBC (-20)

Neutro

No left shift

Lymph N/

Excitement (adrenaline = epinephrine)

Common reaction

WBC (12-15)

No left shift

Lymph (6-14)

Inflammation

WBC

Left shift if >0.3 x109/L bands

Neutro (10-20)

Severe infections:WBC ; Neutro ; degenerative left shift; toxic changes

Page 47: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Cattles’ Hemogram

Stress (cortico-steroids)

WBC N/No left shift

Lymph Eos

Excitement (adrenaline = epinephrine)WBC (15-27)No left shiftLymph N

Inflammation

Acute:

WBC N/Marked left shift

(>0.3 x109/L bands)

Chronic:

WBC (20)

Neutro Left shift

Normally: Lymph# > Neutro#

so WBC DIFF is more important than WBC#!

Page 48: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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WBC- General Interpretation

•pathological conditions

•duration

•prognosis

Repeated analyses ->

Best for assessment of

Page 49: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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WBC- General Interpretation

•neutrophils

•mild left shift

•persistent eosinophils

Mild infection that the body can handle well

Page 50: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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WBC- General Interpretation

•neutrophils

•mild left shift

•lymphocytes

•eosinopenia

Moderate or severe infection

Page 51: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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WBC- General Interpretation

•immature neutrophils

•segmented neutrophils

Grave condition

Page 52: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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WBC- General Interpretation

•neutrophils

•no immature neutrophils

•lymphocytes

•eosinophils

Stress (e.g., severe disease, pain) or steroid influence

Page 53: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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WBC- General Interpretation

•monocytes

Chronic disease

Page 54: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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WBC- General Interpretation

•degenerative left shift

•falling lymphocyte numbers

•persistent lymphopenia

•persistent absence of eosinophils

Each of these signs = Unfavourable prognosis

Page 55: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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WBC- General Interpretation

•falling WBC count together with increase in lymphocyte and eosinophil

counts

•decreasing numbers of immature neutrophils

Each of these signs = Good prognostic signs,

convalescence

Page 56: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Interpretation – Medonic histogram (dog)

Platelets/Thrombocytes (PLT)

Platelets and Red blood cells / Erythrocytes (RBC)

White blood cells/Leukocytes (WBC) divided into 3 populations – LYM, MID and GRAN

Page 57: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Interpretation – Medonic histogram (cat)

Platelets/Thrombocytes (PLT) – typical for cat: low, flat curve with poor distinction from red cells = FD-flagPlatelets and Red blood cells/Erythrocytes (RBC)

White blood cells / Leukocytes (WBC) divided into 3 populations – LYM, MID and GRAN

Page 58: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Interpretation – Medonic histogram (horse)

Platelets/Thrombocytes (PLT) – typical for horse: low, flat curve, relatively few platelets

Platelets and Red blood cells / Erythrocytes (RBC)

White blood cells / Leukocytes (WBC) divided into 3 populations – LYM, MID and GRAN

Page 59: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Interpretation – Numerical values

Platelet parametersPlatelet count (PLT)

Mean platelet volume (MPV)

Plateletcrit (PCT)

Platelet distribution width (PDW)

Page 60: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Interpretation – Numerical values

Red blood cell parametersHemoglobin (HGB)

Hematocrit (HCT = RBC x MCV)

Red blood cell count (RBC)

Mean red cell volume (MCV)

Mean cell hemoglobin concentration (MCHC = HGB/HCT)

Red cell distribution width (RDW)

Page 61: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Interpretation – Numerical values

White blood cell parametersWhite blood cells count (WBC)

Lymphocytes (LYM, LYM%)

Granulocytes (GRAN, GRAN%)

Mid cells (MID, MID%)

Page 62: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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Why review a blood smear?

To identify among the white blood cells for example….Immature cellsToxic changesMonocytosisEosinophiliaBasophiliaMast cellsLeukemia (blast cells)

To identify among the red blood cells for example….AutoagglutinationEccentrocytesEchinocytesSpherocytesHeinz bodiesNucleated red blood cellsBlood parasites in or on erythrocytesParasites in plasma, e.g. microfilaria

Page 63: Veterinary Hematology - An introduction Gittan Gröndahl, DVM, PhD

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When should one review a blood smear?

If you routinely make a blood smear it will always be available ……

Blood samples that look very abnormal If WBC is lower or higher than normal,

especially if over 30x109/L If the absolute count of lymphocytes (LYM)

or mid cells (MID) is above normal If any parameter is outside normal range

together with an instrument flag Blood samples with signs of anemia