Term
What are the purposes of lab testing? |
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Definition
Aid in Diagnosis Evaluate patient's condition Evaluate effects of treatment Prognostic indicator (doing better, doing worse) |
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Term
What is some of the equipment we use in the laboratory? |
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Definition
Microscope Unopette Hemacytometer Refractometer Cell counters Chemistry analyzer Slides and stains |
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Term
Examples of lab samples we may come across in a clinical setting? |
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Definition
Blood, urine, and feces = what we most commonly see. Also, tissues, ear swabs, skin scrapings, and effusions and body fluids. |
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Term
*How can we collect blood? |
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Definition
Via vacutainer VS needle and syringe or needle prick |
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Term
What kind of tube would we use when collecting blood via needle prick? |
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Definition
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Term
Blood collections sites will vary between species...what are the most common collection sites? |
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Definition
Jugular, cephalic, and saphenous veins
*(Also femoral, but femoral is more for cats) |
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Term
Other sites to collect blood that is not so common? |
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Definition
Ear vein (rabbits), caudal/tail vein (rats), and toe nail |
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Term
What is the advantage of vacutainers versus needle and syringe THEN transporting the blood into a tube? |
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Definition
-It will give a better sample, once through the needle (less trauma to the red blood cells). -It also if the tube is filled accurately, dilution effect of anticoagulant. |
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Term
Capillary tubes draw blood via what? |
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Definition
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Term
There are many ways you can fill a capillary tube, name them... |
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Definition
From a vacutainer, syringe, needle hub, and vein |
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Term
What diagnostic lab tests are performed...in the lab? |
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Definition
Cell ID and counts Chemistries Cytology (smears..) Chemical constituents Fecal Floatation Culture and sensitivity Toxicology |
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Term
Antech and Roche are names of what? |
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Definition
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Term
Inaccurate results include what? |
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Definition
Incorrect sample Poorly preserved sample Sample handled incorrectly Technician error Equipment malfunction Clerical errors |
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Term
What are the advantages of IN-HOUSE testing? |
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Definition
Fast results -can do it at pet-side, earlier diagnosis and treatment, preanesthetic testing is current You control the sample -can use micro samples, less chance of losing it Less expensive in most cases -so you can do more tests Fewer artifacts |
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Term
What are the disadvantages of IN-HOUSE testing? |
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Definition
It requires investment in equipment, supplies, and test kits It requires trained staff-time issues -they often pile other jobs on lab tech Need quality control procedures |
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Term
So when talking about needing quality control, what do they mean? |
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Definition
To make sure the results are accurate, it's smart to run some in-house controls daily and chart those results to document any instrument drift. Also, splitting samples is a way to check how accurate the result is, whether it be technician or equipment error-make sure results match up. |
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Term
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Definition
Can do some tests for cheaper-like panels (lots of different tests), it's the only place you can do a certain test (for some hormones etc), and there are experts available for consulting over the phone. |
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Term
Outside lab disadvantages? |
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Definition
Unfortunately, it takes more time to get the results back...it will often cost more than in-house, tests or results could get lost or never show up, and you do need a lot more blood to send out. |
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Term
What is blood? What is it made up of? |
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Definition
A tissue, made of cells and plasma |
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Term
If are to eventually run tests with blood, what cautions do we take with the blood? |
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Definition
Always handle cautiously, but handling does vary with each test run. Know the temp it must be at (room temp, refrigerate or freeze?) AVOID freezing cells Know that physiological state of the patient will affect a test |
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Term
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Definition
Clotting factors and fibrinogen |
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Term
What do you do to get serum? |
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Definition
Let blood clot for 20-30 minutes, and spin it down. |
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Term
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Definition
Bursting of red blood cells |
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Term
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Definition
By rough handling, shaking of blood Too much pressure drawing blood Moisture in equipment Injecting too fast into tube (let it vacuum) Intravascular probs |
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Term
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Definition
Whole blood, anticoagulant (EDTA, heparin) |
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Term
What anticoagulant lives in the lavender top tube? |
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Definition
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Term
What anticoagulant lives in the green top tube? |
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Definition
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Term
What anticoagulant lives in the Blue top tube? |
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Definition
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Term
What anticoagulant lives in the red top tube? |
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Definition
NONE, tricked ya fo sho. No anticoagulant live in this ish. Ish gone be clottin up in hurr in da red top tube. |
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