Automated Cell Counting Instrumentation and Point of Care
Automated Cell Counting Instrumentation and Point of Care
OF CARE TESTING
Principles of Instrumentation
Electronic Impedance
Also low voltage direct current resistance Most common method used Detection and measurement of changes in electrical resistance produced by cells as the cross a small aperture Blood cells are suspended in an electrically conductive diluent Two electrodes establish an electric current
External electrode located in blood suspension Internal electrode located within a hollow glass tube containing the aperture
Number of pulses equal number of cells Size of voltage pulse proportional to size of cell
Pulses collected and sorted according to amplitude by pulse height analyzers Data plotted on histogram
May use proprietary lytic systems to allow separation and quantitation of WBC into several populations
Aperture diameter
Hydrodynamic focusing
Sample stream is surrounded by sheath fluid as it passes thru the central axis of the aperture
Narrows the stream of cells to a single file (laminar flow) for passage thru sensing zone Eliminates data above and below the focus points Eliminates recirculation of blood cells
Radiofrequency
High frequency sine wave High voltage electromagnetic current between electrodes detects size of cells based on cell density
Pulse size proportional to interior density As current passes thru cells, it is attenuated by N:C ratio, nuclear density, and cytoplasmic granulation
Scatterplot
Cell populations in clusters, number of dots representing the concentration of the cells. Allows separation of WBCs into five part differentials
Also known as VCS technology when combined with lasers to characterize surface shape and reflectivity of cell
Low frequency: Volume High frequency: conductivity Conductivity signal corrected for cell volume
Known as opacity
Light:scatter
Optical scatter
Flow cytometry May be used as a primary methodology or in combination with other principles Cells are diluted and hydrodynamically focused thru a quarts crystal past a focused light source
Usually a tungsten-halogen lamp or helium neon laser Laser lights are emitted in single wavelength Low divergence or spread Interference to laser beam allows for enumeration and differentiation of cellular element
Filters and mirrors separate wavelengths and present the wavelength to photodetectors Lenses with blocker bars prevent nonscattered light from entering detectors
Side scatter
90 degree light scatter Results from reflection and refraction of light from structures inside the cell Forward low angle and forward high angle scatter Correlate with cell volume and internal complexity Differential analysis
Hematology analyzers:
Hydraulics
Aspirating unit Dispensers Diluters Mixing chambers Aperture baths Glow cells hemoglobinometer
Pneumatics
Vacuums and pressures for moving valves and samples thru the hydraulic systems
Electrical system
Coulter instrument
Simultaneous measurement of volume, conductivity and light scatter provides statistical accuracy
Onyx series
GEN S, LH 750
On line reticulocyte counts can perform CD4/CD8 counts
DXH 800
Flow Cytometric Digital Morphology (FCDM) providing 10 times more data per sample allowing reduced review rates multi-angle scatter technology, onboard reagents and new advanced algorithms
Samples are aspirated and divided into two chambers RBC aperture chamber
platelets RBC
Diluent lyses RBCs to free hemoglobin WBC counted by impedance Signals are sent to analyzer for correction and digital conversion 35-90 fL- lymphocytes 90-160 fL- mononuclears 160-450 fL-Granulocytes Fluid is delivered to hemoglobinometer for hg concentration Trasmittance read at 525 nm
Repeat counts must fall within specified tolerance limits to be acceptable by the instrument Allows for good reproducibility Prevents errors resulting from aperture obstruction and statistical outliers
Pulse height is measured and categorized 256 channels for WBC and RBC 64 channels for platelets Histograms are then created
High takeoff of histogram May indicate nucleated RBCs, clumped platelets, unlysed RBCs
R2 flag Loss of valley between lymphocyte and mononuclear region owing to overlap or insufficient separation
Primary set for distributional abnormalities User sets reference ranges and programs instrument to flag parameters as high and low
Primary suspect flags for morphologic abnormalities Possible presence of abnormal cells triggered when cell population falls outside expected regions Or when statistical limitations are exceeded
Instrument specific
Sysmex Instrumentation
WBC, RBC, Hb, Hct, and platelet counts are measured directly Three hydraulic systems
WBC channel RBC/platelet channel Sheath stream with hydrodynamic focusing Hct determined directly based on pulse height generated by RBCs Hemoglobin Hb converted to oxyhemoglobin combining with Na lauryl sulfate forming a hemichrome molecule Measured at 555nm
Uses floating threshold to discriminate between cell populations Adjusted discrimination levels after particle size distribution curve is made Enables differentiation between cells of almost similar sizes
K-4500 and KX 21
SE-9000/9500
Uses four detection chambers for WBC Yields 5 part differentials DC/RF detection system
Granulocytes further analyzed to determine immature cells Differential shrinkage and lysis method
XE-2100
sysmex
CELL-DYN instrumentation
Abbott laboratories WBC and differential derived from patented multiangle polarized scatter separation
Hydrodynamically focused sample stream is directed through a quartz flow past an argon ion laser Scattered light is measured at multiple angles 0 degree forward scatter for size 90 degree orthogonal scatter for cellular complexity 90 degree depolarized light scatter for granules
Scatter information is gathered from the different angles and presented as scatterplots May show different combinations Lobularity vs complexity
Size vs complexity
Granularity vs lobularity
Cell dyne
Impedance channel for RBC/Platelets Hb channel WBC, RBC, platelets, Hb measured directly
Bayer Instrumentation
RBC/platelet channel Cells isovolumetrically sphered to eliminate optical noise Flow cytometric light scattering
Differential scatter Low angle (2-3 degrees) for size High angle (5-15 degrees) for complexity Eliminates the adverse effect of varied levels of hemoglobin on RBC deformability Mie theory of light scattering of dielectric spheres Used to plot scatter intensity signals from two angles
Hb Channel Determined using modified cyanmethemoglobin Peroxidase RBC lysed and WBC stained for peroxidase
H2O2 + 4 chloro-1-naphthol + cellular peroxidase= dark precipitate Tungsten halogen darkfield optics used to measure: X axis: Absorbance (peroxidase content) Y axis: Forward scatter (size) WBC count taken from optical signals in the channel Simply used as internal control
Basophil lobularity
Basophils resistant to lysis All other cells are left with nuclei X axis: high angle, nuclear complexity Y axis: low angle, cell size Basophils: above horizontal threshold Lysed cells cluster into:
Neutrophils: right of x axis Mononuclears: Left of X axis Blast cells: below mononuclears
Advia 120
Advia 2120
Uses Auramine 0 Forward scatter: size Side fluorescence: RNA content Low, mid, high fluorescence: inversely proportional with reticulocyte maturity Immature reticulocyte fraction: ratio of immature retics to total RBC
CELL DYN 3500R Uses MAPPS technology Offline RBC staining with new methylene blue N
CELL DYN 4000 MAPPS technology with fluorescent detection
Capable of fully automated random access reticulocyte staining Proprietary membrane permeable dye that emits green light
Uses CD4K530
Beckman Coulter
Offline preparation for STKS and MAXM Uses new methylene blue Reticulocytes have greater optical scatter and greater opacity
Scattergrams:
MCVr, CHCMr, RDWr, HDWr, CHr, CHDWr Useful in evaluation EPO response
CHr: hemoglobin content of reticulocyte calculated as product of colume and Hgb concentration
LIMITATIONS AND
INTERFERENCE
Calibration
Performed:
Upon initial installation Every 6 months After major repair or changes As required by the manufacturer
Cyanmethemoglobin
Remains the only standard in hematology for calibration and quality control
Whole blood calibration largely replaced by commercial calibrators which has been assayed against reference methods
Instrument Limitations
Limitations are related to methodology employed Inability to distinguish cells reliably from other particles or cell fragments of the same size Non lysed cells may yield inaccurate results Automated data may be not be released
Failure of internal checks Flaggings Ensure that manual reviews are done
Sample Limitation
Cold agglutinins Incterus Lipemia Hemolysis Nucleated RBC Platelet clumps High WBC counts Sample age
It does not matter where testing is done or who performs the tests so long as it follows same regulatory requirements
Waived
Most POCT are waived tests with few moderate complexity tests Popular due to ease of operation and rapid results
Advantages
Fast results which speed up patient management Direct patient samples are used with minimal delay
Disadvantages
Cost per test Oversight of POCT
Appropriate use Proper method selection Quality assurance Personnel training Needs definite policy and procedures
Quality Assurance
Accuracy and precision Most have simple QC and calibration process
Hemoglobin
Measured by modified hemoglobinometers Hemocue Utilizes small cuvette with lysing agent and reagents to form Hb azide Measured photometrically Major disadvantage: blood cell contamination with tissue juice
Test card composed of molded plastic with fluid well containing impregnated pads
Hematocrit
Centrifuge based microhematocrits Conductivity based Measures resistance of RBC to electrical conduction
Cell counts