Introduction to Hematology
What is Hematology? Hematology is the science or study of blood and its diseases.
In fact the word hematology is derived from the Greek words:
- Haima meaning blood
- Logos meaning science or study
What do we study in this course?
1. The normal physiology of blood, i.e. what are the different components of blood, what are the different blood cells, how are they formed, how are they destroyed, what is their normal % in the blood.
2. The diseases of blood; i.e. the abnormalities that can take place in the blood and reflect themselves as blood diseases. Under this, we are going to study two broad categories of blood diseases including the anemias and the leukemias or blood cancers.
In addition, the hematology laboratory covers the study of hemostasis and thrombosis, dealing with the control of blood loss and the problems related to hemorrhage and clotting.
How is the study of blood performed? (What are the tools used?)
* By making use of instruments to determine certain parameters including cell counts and others.
* By taking blood and by examining it under the microscope.
In other words, the study of blood could not be feasible before the days of microscopy.
At that time, only the gross appearance of blood could be studied and little was understood about its composition and biological functions.
During the seventeenth century, Leeuwenkoek and others studied blood with the aid of primitive microscopes and the science of Hematology was born.
Then the study of cells under the microscope was greatly enhanced during the 19th century, when Paul Ehrlich developed staining techniques to better differentiate the various normal and abnormal cells present in human blood. In the last 70 years however, the science of clinical hematology has grown enormously and has become a broad science, linked with other sciences, including, Oncology (study of malignant changes in cells), Genetics, Immunology…..
Blood is that fluid that circulates in certain specialized vessels of the body called blood vessels.
The blood vessels are made of three major types:
1. Arteries: are blood vessels that carry oxygenated blood from the heart to the different body organs.
2. Veins: are blood vessels that carry the blood from the body organs back to the heart.
3. Capillaries: are very small blood vessels between veins and arteries whose walls are so thin that they permit the exchange of fluid and gases between blood and tissues.
The blood may be thought of as a transportation system. As it circulates throughout the body, oxygen is transported from the lungs to the tissues, products of digestion are absorbed in the intestine and carried to the various tissues of the body, and substances produced in various organs are transferred to other tissues for use. Cellular elements of the blood may also be transported to fight infection or aid in blood coagulation. At the same time, waste products from the tissues are picked up by the blood to be excreted through the skin, kidneys and lungs.
Composition of blood
The total blood volume in an adult is 5 to 6 liters, or 7 to 8% of the body weight. Blood is composed of two major constituents:
A liquid part called plasma
A solid (cellular) part
In a normal person, approximately 55-60% of the blood is plasma of which around 90% is water. The remaining 10% is composed of: proteins, namely (albumin, globulin, and fibrinogen), carbohydrates, lipids, vitamins, hormones, enzymes, plus some inorganic salts, (Na, K, Ca, Mg, Cl, bicarbonate and phosphate).
When coagulation is prevented by the use of anticoagulants, the liquid portion of the blood is termed plasma and contains the protein fibrinogen.
Several anticoagulants are available for various purposes in the clinical laboratory, but the most commonly used for hematologic procedures are EDTA (chelates Ca++), Citrate (chelates Ca++), and Heparin (acts by neutralizing thrombin, thus preventing the formation of fibrin from fibrinogen).
EDTA tubes (violet stopper) Tubes with sodium citrate (blue stopper)
Tubes with heparin (green stopper)
Simple tubes (red stopper)
If a blood specimen is allowed to clot, the liquid portion released from the clot is called serum and does not contain any fibrinogen due to the fact that the fibrinogen was utilized to form the fibrin threads of the blood clot.
The other part of blood which was called the cellular part (formed elements) constitutes 40-45% of the blood and consists of three major components: Red blood cells, leukocytes or white blood cells, and platelets.
1. Red blood cells: the most numerous cells in the blood are non-nucleated, deeply pigmented elements that are concerned primarily with tissue respiration, transport of O2 to the tissues and CO2 from the tissues.
The scientific name of them is erythrocytes
red cells
When seen under the microscope, they have a reddish color which is due to the presence of a pigment called hemoglobin (Hb) that normally makes them look red and makes the whole blood look red.
2. White blood cells or leukocytes: in the living state, the WBC(s) have a whitish grayish color, therefore we call them WBC(s) and the scientific name of them is leukocytes. Leukocytes are a heterogeneous group of nucleated cells, the major function of which is to protect the host from the external environment.
Five distinct types constitute normal blood:
Neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils and basophils. Each of these cells has a characteristic morphologic appearance and more importantly, each serves a specific physiologic role.
3. Platelets: these are small structures, they are not true cells and in fact, they are
cytoplasmic fragments of giant cells in the body, called megakaryocytes (cells
with a giant nucleus).
The main function of platelets is in the process of sealing an injured blood vessel or in other words, in blood clotting, and when they do so, they form a clot or a thrombus, this is why, their scientific name is thrombocytes.
Sources of blood for Hematological tests
Blood specimens may be obtained for hematologic tests either by venipuncture or by skin puncture, but venous blood is preferred to skin puncture for most hematologic tests. However there are several situations where skin puncture should be used to obtain blood specimen. Infants, particularly newborns, have a much smaller total blood volume than adults; drawing blood by routine venipuncture on a daily basis can quickly result in hospital – induced anemia. Skin puncture is also a much safer means of blood collection.
For adults, skin puncture may be required because of obesity, burns, or extremely small or severely damaged veins or when IV fluid is flowing into the only accessible veins.
Skin puncture is also used to save the veins of patients receiving chemotherapy and in the elderly when possible. Skin puncture can be obtained from an ear lobe or finger of an adult or from the heel of an infant.
Blood withdrawn by this procedure is collected in special microtubes.
How do we study blood?
In the study of blood, our interest is mainly concerning the formed elements of blood, namely the blood cells.
How to examine the blood cells?
In their living state, the great majority of blood cells are not colored and therefore, it is not possible to study them by means of the ordinary microscope. In order to study cells, they have to be colored artificially, and this process is called staining and here we use blood stains.
There are actually three different types of blood stains:
1-Vital or Supravital stains:
Some blood stains can be used on living cells and they are known as vital or supravital stains but these will be used infrequently and the more usual stains in Hematology are the regular stains.
2-Regular stains:
Regular stains are used on killed or dead cells. For that purpose, the cells have first to be killed very rapidly and preserved (to prevent degeneration) and this process is called fixing. So for proper fixing, the death of the cell has to occur very fast because we cannot allow changes to occur in the cell before it dies.
For that purpose, we use special agents known as fixatives. What are the known fixatives used in Hematology?
1. Methanol (most commonly used fixative in Hematology)
2. Ethanol
3. Formalin
4. Glacial Acetic Acid
3- Special Stains:
Special stains are used to stain specific structures in the cell.
What do we use for coloring cells?
We use a group of stains known as the Romanowsky stains and these are called after the man who first described them. The Romanowsky stains are many in type but they all consist mainly of:
A basic dye which is methylene blue (blue);
and
An acidic dye which is eosin (red),
plus
A variety of intermediate stains (methylene azures: oxidation products of methylene blue) that give different shades to different structures. So these are polychrome stains because they produce multiple colors when applied to cells.
Of the Romanowsky groups of stains, the following are standards:
Leishman stain
Jenner stain
May-Grun Wald stain
Wright stain
Giemsa
Modifications differ in the ratios of dye components and the manufacturing methods used to oxidize methylene blue. The above 4 stains stain best the cytoplasm and the granules and the Giemsa stain stains best the nucleus and this is why we stain the chromosomes with it.
Principle of staining with the Romanowsky type of stains:
These stains act by chemical interaction with the various substances present in the cell (granules, ribosomes, mitochondria) and this reaction depends on the pH of the structure.
Acidic substances in the cell take the basic stain (methylene blue) so they stain bluish in color and these are called basophilic because they like the basic dye. Ex(s) of these are RNA, DNA, certain cytoplasmic proteins and granules of basophils. For instance, the more RNA there are in the cell, the more bluish is the cell (ex, immature cells, plasma cells).
On the other hand, all basic structures in the cell will take up the acidic stain (eosin), so they appear red in color. So, basic structures are called acidophilic or eosinophilic because they like the acidic dye: ex(s), some proteins such as Hb, some cytoplasmic constituents and granules of eosinophils.
Finally, substances with intermediate or neutral pH will take intermediate colors and as such these substances are called neutrophilic.
Of these stains, we are mainly concerned with the Wright stain and Giemsa stain.
Since the Wright stain gives excellent details of the cytoplasm and the granules and the Giemsa stain is excellent for nuclear detail, ideally what we do is stain first with the Wright stain and after that with Giemsa stain.
Procedure of staining with the Romanowsky stains
Manual staining methods
Rack Method (uses rods overlying a sink that hold slides in a horizontal position)
A. Staining with the Wright stain
* Obtain a clean slide, place at the edge a drop of blood and spread it, then
allow it to dry in the air.
* Place the smear on a flat surface and add to its surface a known volume of Wright stain.
Since the Wright stain powder is dissolved in absolute methanol, we do not need to fix the cells before staining. During the first two minutes, actual fixing of the cells takes place.
* After two minutes, add an equal volume of phosphate buffer solution to each slide. The pH of the buffer will affect the quality of staining, the optimum being between pH 6.4 and 6.8. The buffer-stain solution is mixed gently by blowing on it. A greenish metallic sheen indicates the proper stain: buffer ratio.
Leave for 4 minutes during which actual staining is taking place.
* Wash with tap water. Flush thoroughly the staining mixture from the slide until all stain is removed. Do not over wash.
B. Stain with Giemsa
* Add buffer on the slide.
* Add few drops of Giemsa and leave for 2 minutes.
Ideally, we should add the drops of Giemsa on the edges of the slide and then blow in order to get an even coloration of the slide.
* Wash with tap water.
* The slides are cleaned off from the back with gauze and the specimen is air dried.
N.B: Iif we want to stain with Giemsa stain alone, we should start by fixing the slides, because the Giemsa stain is diluted twice, so we cannot use it to fix the slides with.
Advantages and disadvantages of the rack method
The rack method is very cost effective for a small number of slides because it uses a minimum of stain solution/slide.
In addition, one or several slides may be stained simultaneously. The disadvantages of the rack method include the time involved and the inconsistency in the staining quality related to variances in the amounts of stain and buffer/slide and the timing/step.
Automated staining methods
Carousel type
This instrument sprays a measured amount of stain reagents on the smears as they are transported in a rotating carousel.
Advantages of automated stainers include the following:
1. They are time saving. Once the slides are loaded into the instrument, the operator
can walk away and staining time is less than 10’.
2. Stain quality is consistent from smear to smear.