Routine Blood Results Explained 3/e: A guide for Nurses & Allied Health Professionals
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About this ebook
There have been many changes since the second edition – from alterations in units (such as g/L for haemoglobin, rather than g/dL) to the merging of haematology with biochemistry, blood transfusion and immunology to form blood science. Accordingly, in this new edition there are more details of immunology, immunological diseases, and the blood tests involved.
These changes reflect the new roles which nurses, podiatrists and physiotherapists are developing, often with increased responsibility for examining, diagnosing and managing patients, and ordering and interpreting blood tests. The objective of this book is to support and enable these professionals to be successful in their new roles.
Wherever possible, each chapter concludes with a brief case study. In addition, more complete case reports – reflecting the different aspects of primary and secondary care – are presented in the concluding chapters.
CONTENTS:
The red blood cell
The white blood cell
Coagulation
Blood transfusion
Immunology
Urea & electrolytes, and renal function
Investigation of liver function and plasma proteins
Atherosclerosis and its risk factors
Calcium, bone and musculo-skeletal disease
Investigation of thyroid function
Blood gases and pH
Case reports in primary and secondary care
Special situations (pregnancy, the neonate, and the elderly)
Physiotherapy and podiatry
Adult reference ranges
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Routine Blood Results Explained 3/e - Dr Andrew Blann
Routine Blood Results Explained
Dr Andrew Blann
PhD FRCPath
Consultant Clinical Scientist
and Honorary Senior Lecturer in Medicine
Haemostasis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology Unit
University Department of Medicine
City Hospital, Birmingham, UK
Routine Blood Results Explained
Dr Andrew Blann
ISBN: 9781905539–88–8
First published 2006
Second edition 2007
Third revised edition 2013
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without either the prior permission of the publishers or a licence permitting restricted copying in the United Kingdom issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London, W1T 4LP. Permissions may be sought directly from M&K Publishing, phone: 01768 773030, fax: 01768 781099 or email: publishing@mkupdate.co.uk
Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Notice
Clinical practice and medical knowledge constantly evolve. Standard safety precautions must be followed, but, as knowledge is broadened by research, changes in practice, treatment and drug therapy may become necessary or appropriate. Readers must check the most current product information provided by the manufacturer of each drug to be administered and verify the dosages and correct administration, as well as contraindications. It is the responsibility of the practitioner, utilising the experience and knowledge of the patient, to determine dosages and the best treatment for each individual patient. Any brands mentioned in this book are as examples only and are not endorsed by the publisher. Neither the publisher nor the authors assume any liability for any injury and/or damage to persons or property arising from this publication.
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Contents
Prefaces to the first, second and third editions
Introduction
Abbreviations
Part 1: Haematology, Blood Transfusion and Immunology
Objectives and scope
Chapter 1 The red blood cell
Chapter 2 The white blood cell
Chapter 3 Coagulation
Chapter 4 Blood transfusion
Chapter 5 Immunology
Part 2: Biochemistry
Objectives and scope
Chapter 6 Water, urea and electrolytes
Chapter 7 Investigation of renal function
Chapter 8 Investigation of liver function and plasma proteins
Chapter 9 Atherosclerosis and its risk factors
Chapter 10 Calcium, bone and musculoskeletal disease
Chapter 11 Investigation of thyroid function
Chapter 12 Blood gases and pH
Part 3: Case reports
Chapter 13 Case reports in primary care
Chapter 14 Case reports in secondary care
Part 4: Appendices
Appendix 1: Special situations (pregnancy, the neonate, and the elderly)
Appendix 2: Physiotherapy and podiatry
Appendix 3: Adult reference ranges
Further reading
Index
Prefaces
Preface to the first edition
The objective of this slim volume is to provide help in understanding and interpreting the majority of the normal blood results found in most NHS hospitals. The text, based on the routine blood report forms sent out from Pathology Departments, has evolved from lecture notes given to various healthcare professionals (nurses, phlebotomists, pharmacists, radiographers and physiotherapists, etc.) attending day-long courses on exactly these topics.
An additional objective is to keep the material simple and focused. Thus, the reader seeking a comprehensive in-depth explanation of a wide number of tests and their exact relationship to various clinical diseases will be disappointed. However, it is impossible to fully understand pathology without a sure grounding in physiology. Hence there will be an adequate and clear explanation of those aspects of the body that are necessary to understand a particular test and its associated problems. Examples are provided that will illustrate particular points; it must be stressed that these are not exact and perfect case reports, merely aids in understanding the concepts developed in the text.
Focusing on ‘routine’ blood tests therefore, by definition, excludes tests less frequently reported. In this volume, tests that will be absent from the general discussion are, for example, platelet volume, red cell mass, magnesium, and reproductive hormones. These omissions are not indicative of lack of importance, merely lack of regular requesting. The emphasis is also on the adult, so paediatric tests (by and large) will not be mentioned.
Preface to the second edition
With such a brief interval between the first and second editions, there are few major changes in the practice of routine blood science worthy of addressing – most changes to the text are merely the correction of typographical errors present in the first edition. However, the second edition has benefited from some structural changes, notably the merging of separate chapters on calcium and the thyroid into a single section. New text, generally in response to comments from readers and delegates on M&K courses, includes more details on blood transfusion, and also a completely new chapter with sections on pregnancy, paediatrics, and on immunology as applied to the inflammatory auto-immune connective tissue diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis.
In 2007 haematology is involved in a transition in reporting haemoglobin results from grams per decilitre (e.g. 13.5g/dL) to grams per litre, which therefore becomes 135g/L. Therefore it is simply a question of moving the decimal point one place to the right. Indeed, many hospitals have already made this transition. However, in the present setting I will retain the historical units.
Preface to the third edition
The six-year interval since the second edition has seen many changes. There have been changes in units, such as the transformation of haemoglobin measurements from g/dL to g/L, but also the merging of haematology with biochemistry, blood transformation and immunology to form blood science. Accordingly, in this edition, there are more details of immunology, immunological diseases, and the blood tests involved.
A parallel series of changes has seen the growing responsibility of nurses, podiatrists and physiotherapists. Many are now taking on new roles such as, in sequence:
• Examining the patient
• Proposing a diagnosis
• Venesecting (taking blood)
• Ordering blood tests
• Interpreting the results
• Managing the condition
Previously, these roles were undertaken by medical staff only, but it is now clear that appropriately trained professionals can be equipped to carry out these tasks.
The objective of this book is to support and enable these professionals to be successful in their new roles. To this end, wherever possible, each chapter will conclude with a brief case study. More complete case reports, reflecting the different aspects of primary and secondary care, are presented in the concluding chapters.
Introduction
‘…it is estimated that the data received by clinicians from Medical Laboratories constitutes 70–80% of the information they rely on to make major medical decisions…’
The Biomedical Scientist 2005, 49: 38.
This statement is effectively why blood tests are important – they provide three times as much information as do all other sources (history, examination, symptoms, imaging, etc.) combined. Fortunately, the vast majority of routine blood tests (certainly in routine, emergency and critical care medicine) fall easily into one of two groups: haematology (with blood transfusion) and biochemistry. The most recently developed discipline, immunology, now deserves a chapter of its own. The layout of the volume will therefore follow this pattern. Each of the two major sections breaks down into individual chapters and concludes with a dedicated example.
Knowledge is nothing without practice. Therefore the book will conclude with case studies designed to help the practitioner. These cases will look at both primary and secondary care.
What is done where?
In some Pathology Departments, certain tests are done in the Haematology Laboratory, whilst in other hospitals the same test may be performed in the Biochemistry Laboratory. Examples of this include iron studies, C-reactive protein (CRP), and testing for vitamin B12 and serum folate. However, these tests are done on serum obtained from whole blood that has not been anticoagulated. The reader is referred to their own Pathology Service for the correct tube for the test and the destination of these requests.
Overall, our colleagues in the Pathology Department, regardless of discipline, would far rather set the position clear in a phone call than go through the bother of phoning back that a fresh sample in the correct tube must be obtained.
If in doubt – PHONE! !
A note on units
In the real world, of course, results are almost unanimously described as the numbers themselves (e.g. a haemoglobin of 125 or a cholesterol of 5) instead of the more correct way where the result is described with its unit (i.e. 125g/L and 8mmol/L). This shorthand is (almost) universally accepted, and generally makes life considerably easier. It matters not so much that the correct unit of the average size of a red blood cell is described fully (for example, as 112fL, or in shorthand simply as 112) but it does matter that the particular cell is much larger than can be expected in complete health, and therefore implies ill-health.
Reference ranges
In trying to define ill-health, we generally use good health as a comparator. Thus a healthy person can be expected to have a certain healthy blood result profile. However, these values are sometimes not well established and are subject to change. Furthermore, there are many normal (healthy) people whose blood result may not be in the expected range of values – but this does not necessarily mean they are ill. From this point of view, the ‘normal’ values could more accurately be called the ‘desirable’ values and the ‘reference’ range could reasonably be termed a ‘target’ range. Nevertheless, for the purposes of this volume, the reference range will be cited. Haematology and biochemistry are very quantitative sciences, immunology less so. Consequently, the reference range is important. The precise definition of the reference range in use at a particular hospital is crucial and is not transferable to another hospital. This may be because of small differences in the technical manner in which tests are carried out. Furthermore, reference ranges may well (and certainly should) reflect the local population served by the hospital. This is important as different catchment populations may vary considerably, especially in ethnicity.
It is also becoming the case that results will be provided with a reference range that suits the particular patient (for example, a male reference range for blood from a man, a paediatric reference range for an infant, etc.). Care must therefore be taken when comparing samples and reference ranges. In the future, an age-specific and race-specific reference range may also be produced.
As mentioned in the preface to this edition, haematology and biochemistry are rapidly merging and evolving into blood science, in which the numbers definitely mean something. Many practitioners will seek guidance from, and will base treatment on, these blood results. One of the first questions to ask is therefore ‘is the result acceptable?’ In many cases, this boils down to whether or not the results match the reference range, which is presumably derived from normal (i.e. healthy) individuals. However, merely having a result that is a fraction outside the reference range does not necessarily imply a serious pathology. Conversely, a result that is very far from the reference range carries with it an implication of a problem, but several tests (as well as clinical signs, history, etc.) are still needed to be sure of a particular diagnosis.
Abbreviations