pubmed-article:9681207 | pubmed:abstractText | After the neonatal period, the presence of nucleated red blood cells (NRBC) in peripheral blood is indicative of pathology. Despite the clinical utility of such measurements, automated NRBC counting has hitherto not been available on routine automated blood cell counting analysers. To address this, an automated method for the analysis of NRBC was developed and incorporated into the Abbott Cell Dyn 4000 (CD4000) haematology analyser. The system white blood cell (WBC) reagent was specifically formulated to preserve concomitantly white blood cell (WBC) morphology, rapidly lyse red blood cell and NRBC membranes, and subsequently stain NRBC nuclei with a nucleotide specific fluorochrome dye (Kim et al. 1996a). The fluorochrome itself does not permeabilize the membrane of intact viable white blood cells. The sample is processed by flow cytometry and the signals generated from an argon-ion laser light source are analysed. Axial light loss (AxLL), intermediate angle light scatter (IAS) and red fluorescence (FL3) are used to discriminate between particles of various types. By using these discriminators in a three-dimensional approach, NRBC from a discrete cluster which can easily be separated from leucocytes and enumerated as a distinct cell population during the optical WBC differential analysis. Consequently, accurate absolute WBC counts and differentials can be obtained even in the presence of NRBC. Background 'noise' (both fluorescent and non-fluorescent) from platelets. Howell-Jolly bodies, basophilic stippling, RNA from lysed reticulocytes, and DNA from leucocyte and megakaryocytic fragments are essentially eliminated (Kim et al. 1996b). While the membranes of intact and viable leucocytes remain impermeable to the passage of the fluorochrome stain, leucocytes with damaged membranes are permeable to the dye and generate FL3+ signals. Such cells, which are commonly seen as a consequence of sample ageing as well as in some distinctive pathologies, are identified by the algorithm (using their AxLL signal size) and are labelled as non-viable. Moreover, because non-viable leucocytes are retained in the WBC count and differential analyses, the CD4000 is further able to provide both numerical and graphical data regarding the relative frequency of viable and non-viable components. This additional information can serve as valuable 'decision-drivers' in the laboratory data review process. | lld:pubmed |