Abstract

Anemia and iron deficiency continue to be the most prevalent nutritional disorders in the world, affecting billions of people in both developed and developing countries. The initial diagnosis of anemia is typically based on several markers, including red blood cell (RBC) count, hematocrit and total hemoglobin. Using modern hematology analyzers, erythrocyte parameters such as mean corpuscular volume (MCV), mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH), etc. are also being used. However, most of these commercially available analyzers pose several disadvantages: they are expensive instruments that require significant bench space and are heavy enough to limit their use to a specific lab and lead to a delay in results, making them less practical as a point-of-care instrument that can be used for swift clinical evaluation. Thus, there is a need for a portable and economical hematology analyzer that can be used at the point of need. In this work, we evaluated the performance of a system referred to as the cell tracking velocimetry (CTV) to measure several hematological parameters from fresh human blood obtained from healthy donors and from sickle cell disease subjects. Our system, based on the paramagnetic behavior that deoxyhemoglobin or methemoglobin containing RBCs experience when suspended in water after applying a magnetic field, uses a combination of magnets and microfluidics and has the ability to track the movement of thousands of red cells in a short period of time. This allows us to measure not only traditional RBC indices but also novel parameters that are only available for analyzers that assess erythrocytes on a cell by cell basis. As such, we report, for the first time, the use of our CTV as a hematology analyzer that is able to measure MCV, MCH, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC), red cell distribution width (RDW), the percentage of hypochromic cells (which is an indicator of insufficient marrow iron supply that reflects recent iron reduction), and the correlation coefficients between these metrics. Our initial results indicate that most of the parameters measured with CTV are within the normal range for healthy adults. Only the parameters related to the red cell volume (primarily MCV and RDW) were outside the normal range. We observed significant discrepancies between the MCV measured by our technology (and also by an automated cell counter) and the manual method that calculates MCV through the hematocrit obtained by packed cell volume, which are attributed to the artifacts of plasma trapping and cell shrinkage. While there may be limitations for measuring MCV, this device offers a novel point of care instrument to provide rapid RBC parameters such as iron stores that are otherwise not rapidly available to the clinician. Thus, our CTV is a promising technology with the potential to be employed as an accurate, economical, portable and fast hematology analyzer after applying instrument-specific reference ranges or correction factors.

Highlights

  • Anemia and iron deficiency continue to be the most prevalent nutritional disorders in the world, affecting billions of people in both developed and developing countries

  • We report for the first time the use of our cell tracking velocimetry (CTV) as a hematology analyzer able to measure both traditional red blood cell (RBC) indices (MCV, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) and mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH)) and novel indices such as the percentage of hypochromic RBCs and red cell distribution width (RDW), showing for the first time the capability of this technology to perform high precision flow cytometry analysis

  • Some parameters related to the RBC volume (MCV, MCHC and RDW) and measured by CC or CTV are outside the normal range

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Anemia and iron deficiency continue to be the most prevalent nutritional disorders in the world, affecting billions of people in both developed and developing countries. Modern analyzers such as ADVIA (Siemens Healthineers Inc.) uses a range of technologies such as flow cytometry, chemical reaction and spectral absorption reading to provide several indexes, such as reticulocyte count, (early index of ID, as reticulocytes exist in the circulation for only 1–2 days), hypochromic RBC count, (cells with a Hb concentration lower than 28 g/ dL, an indicator of insufficient marrow iron supply that reflects recent iron reduction), etc.[6,11,12] These instruments are accurate, reproducible, and sometimes fast, the cost of the newest, highvolume analyzers is high and can vary from a single instrument of approximately $75,000 to an automated multiple-instrument system in excess of $200,000 d­ ollars[13]. The automated hematology analyzers are not standardized among manufacturers due to patent issues, which makes necessary the establishment of instrument-specific reference ranges and clinical decision v­ alues[15,16]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call