Title of article :
Optimized Method for Reticulocyte Counting: Simple, Accurate, and Comparable to Flow Cytometry
Author/Authors :
Moradabadi, Alireza Student Research Committee - School of Para Medicine - Kerman University of Medical Sciences, Kerman, Iran , Khaleghi, Morteza Pathology and Stem Cell Research Center - Afzalipour Medical School - Kerman University of Medical Sciences, Kerman, Iran , Shahdoost, Maryam Department of Biostatics - School of public Health - Hamadan University of Medical Sciences, Hamadan, Iran , Farsinejad, Alireza Associated Professor in Hematology and Blood Banking - Pathology and Stem Cell Research Center - Kerman University of Medical Sciences, Kerman, Iran
Abstract :
Background: Reticulocytes are immature red blood cells with RNA, spending the final stages of their
maturation in the peripheral blood. The number of reticulocytes in the peripheral blood is the salient evidence of
the effectiveness of bone marrow to produce red blood cells. Currently, reticulocyte count is done manually or
automatically in clinical laboratories. Difficulties and limitations of these approaches, including imprecision,
poor reproducibility and laboriousness are clear. This study used modification in manually staining method to
achieve better counting.
Materials and Methods: The reticulocyte counts of 30 samples were obtained from patients referred to
Afzalipour hospital in Kerman, Iran. The patients aged between 0-3 years old (median age= 1.4 years). Samples
were investigated for reticulocyte count by three different methods, including conventional, modified, and flow
cytometry methods. Modified staining method is used in the optimized method which helps operator to countg
reticulocyte better than conventional method.
Results: Analysis of the results showed a reasonable agreement. Sphericity assumption was checked by
Kolmogorov-Smirnov and Mouchley analyses. Repeated measurement analysis was performed using
Greenhouse-Geisser correction (F=16.6, df=1.105) according to pairwise comparisons with Bonferroni
adjustment. Mean differences for flow cytometry, optimized and common methods were 3.88, 3.59, and 2.46
were significant at the 0.05 level, respectively.
Conclusion: The proposed optimized method was simple method, highly reliable, and comparable to flow
cytometry. Due to the ease of implementation, this method did not need specialized training or the use of
complex devices so it is affordable.
Keywords :
Blood Stains , Flow Cytometry , Reticulocyte , Reticulocyte Count , Staining and Labeling
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics