Open Access
Reticulocyte count with maturation fractions in pancytopenic evaluation by a fully automated counter
Author(s) -
Lin Chung K.,
Hsu Hui C.,
Chau Wing K.,
Jiang Mei L.,
Chiu Chang F.
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
journal of clinical laboratory analysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.536
H-Index - 50
eISSN - 1098-2825
pISSN - 0887-8013
DOI - 10.1002/jcla.1860070612
Subject(s) - reticulocyte , pancytopenia , megaloblastic anemia , aplastic anemia , bone marrow , medicine , anemia , gastroenterology , pathology , biology , biochemistry , messenger rna , gene
Abstract Using a fully automated reticulocyte counter, the roles of the reticulocyte count with maturation in pancytopenia were evaluated. Different groups of pancytopenia including aplastic anemia, infiltrative marrow disorder, hypersplenism, and megaloblastic anemia were recruited. All patients had bone marrow examinations for morphological diagnosis and reticulocyte evaluation using an automated counter. The roles of these parameters were then analyzed statistically in the differential evaluation among these conditions. The following subjects were studied: 292 normal subjects, 67 cases of aplastic anemia, 69 cases of marrow infiltration by different malignancies, 35 cases of hypersplenism, and 13 cases of megaloblastic anemia. The results showed that the absolute retlculocyte counts were lowest in the groups of aplastic anemia and megaloblastic anemia and highest in hypersplenism. Both showed significant differences from the infiltrative groups. The maturation fractions were most immature in the group of marrow infiltration and are significantly different from the other groups. It was concluded that the highest absolute reticulocyte count (>0.09 10 12 /L) obtained in pancytopenic patients suggests it to be a case of hypersplenism. The lowest counts ( < 0.03 10 12 /L) with lowest immature fractions ( < 10%) suggest the groups of aplastic or megaloblastic anemias. The highest immature fractions ( >30%) with a nearly normal reticulocyte count favor the group of marrow infiltration. © 1993 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.