Premium
The effects of storage at 4°C and 20°C on the hemograms of C57BL/6 mice and Wistar rats using the IDEXX ProCyte Dx and blood smear evaluations
Author(s) -
LayssolLamour Catherine,
Lavabre Typhaine,
Braun JeanPierre,
Trumel Catherine,
BourgèsAbella Nathalie
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
veterinary clinical pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.537
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1939-165X
pISSN - 0275-6382
DOI - 10.1111/vcp.12784
Subject(s) - medicine , blood smear , pathology , malaria
Abstract Background Delayed blood analysis might be unavoidable in laboratory practice, but little is known about rodent blood stability, especially cell morphology and scattergram results. Objectives This study aimed to evaluate the stability of rodent blood cell counts and morphologies at different temperatures using the ProCyte Dx analyzer and performing manual observations. Methods Ten Wistar rats and 10 C57bl/6 mice were sampled on EDTA tubes and aliquoted for storage (4°C, 20°C). Hematologic analyses were performed immediately and at T6h, T24h, T48h (rats and mice), and T72h (rats only) after storage. Results In rats, at any temperature, red blood cell counts, hemoglobin concentrations (HGB), mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH) levels, and reticulocyte, white blood cell (WBC), eosinophil, and impedance platelet counts remained stable over time. The main changes were observed at 20°C for hematocrit (HCT), mean corpuscular volume (MCV), mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC), and WBC differential counts. Optical platelet counts (PLT‐O) and platelet variables underwent changes at both temperatures from T24h. In mice, red blood cell counts by impedance (RBC‐I), MCH, and WBC, lymphocyte, eosinophil, and platelet counts, and plateletcrit (PCT) were stable over time and at all temperatures. As in rats, the most significant changes were observed at 20°C and concerned the optical RBC (RBC‐O) counts, HCTs, MCVs, MCHCs, and reticulocyte, neutrophil, and monocyte counts. For both species, blood cell morphologies were altered from T24h at all temperatures, and platelet clumps were more numerous at 4°C. Conclusions When rodent blood analyses need to be delayed, storage at 4°C is preferred and should not exceed 24 hours. PLT counts should be interpreted cautiously in refrigerated specimens with mandatory blood smear evaluations when abnormal scattergrams are observed.