Difference between revisions of "Cytology Q&A 13"
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Revision as of 17:19, 8 August 2011
This question was provided by Manson Publishing as part of the OVAL Project. See more [[:Category:{{{book}}}|{{{book}}}]]. |
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Abdominal fluid is aspirated from a 14-year-old neutered male Labrador-cross dog. Analysis reveals: TP = 10 g/l; erythrocytes = 10 × 109/l; NCC = 0.4 × 109/l. A cytospin preparation is prepared and smears made.
Question | Answer | Article | |
What cell types are seen (Wright–Giemsa, ×100 oil)? |
There was a low density of nucleated cells in the cytospin, a finding that would be expected based on the NCC. |
[[|Link to Article]] | |
How would you classify this fluid? | A transudate. |
[[|Link to Article]] | |
What considerations/comments would you have regarding this classification? | Transudates are classically associated with hypoproteinaemia/hypoalbuminaemia. Albumin levels are usually <15–18 g/l before effusion will form due to hypoalbuminaemina alone. |
[[|Link to Article]] |