ASCPi - Recall 4.
ASCPi - Recall 4.
ASCPi - Recall 4.
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Meaning of coefficient of variation
Sperms attached to each other, either head to head, head to tail, etc. What discrepancy?
Collection of blood gas sample
Difference between Citrobacter and Salmonella
Hemoglobinuria will only be seen if: Haptoglobin is depleted
Contact lens parasite: Acanthamoeba
Consistent SG in urine of 1.010: Diabetes Insipidus
SG of 1.050 presence of: Abnormal solutes
Proteins nearest to cathode: Gamma and Beta
Clinical findings of patient with Lactic Acidosis
How to resolve if RBCs are stained blue in Wright’s Stain?
Parasite that causes autoinfection in an immunocompromised patient: S. strercoralis
RBC morphology of Hookworm infection
CSF with increased Neutro: Bacterial
Tap water bacillus: M. gordonae
Biochemical reaction of Aeromonas hydrophilia
Decreased Iron and decreased TIBC but normal iron stores? My Answer: Anemia of chronic disease
Alpha Thalassemia may consist of what: Bart’s HgB
Cofactor of more than 300 enzymes: Magnesium and Zinc (if both present, answer Mg)
Zinc protoporphyrin is never tested in children on lead poisoning, why? My answer: low sensitivity
Meaning of creatinine clearance
Parameters for accurate monitoring of Phenytoin
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"ESKAPE"
Enterococcus faecium:
Staphylococcus aureus:
Klebsiella:
Acinetobacter baumannii:
Multidrug-resistant A. baumannii has spread to civilian hospitals in part due to the transport of infected
soldiers through multiple medical facilities. Due to the prevalence of infections and outbreaks caused by
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multidrug-resistant A. baumannii, few antibiotics are effective for treating infections caused by this
pathogen.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
One of the most worrisome characteristics of P. aeruginosa is its low antibiotic susceptibility, which is
attributable to a concerted action of multidrug "efflux pumps" with chromosomally encoded antibiotic
resistance genes.
Enterobacter spp (Two clinically important species from this genus are E. aerogenes and E. cloacae.
E. aerogenes:
The majority are sensitive to most antibiotics designed for this bacteria class, but this is complicated by their
inducible resistance mechanisms, particularly "lactamase", which means that they quickly become resistant
to standard antibiotics during treatment.
E. cloacae:
4. a person has fasting glucose of 140 and OGTT of 180. What further testing is needed to confirm diabetes
mellitus.
11. I only got one blood panel---- choices are just the description of the antibodies. The antibodies I detected
are the Lewis antigen. So the answer I chose is “ antibodies adsorbed onto the surface of the erythrocyte”
13. picture of blood smear with schistocytes ----- choices led me to choose DIC.
14. What to do if accidently splashed with chemical on eyes ------ flush with water for 15 minutes
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15. what increases in hemolytic anemia ---- elevated unconjugated bilirubin, elevated urobilinogen.
16. normal control 3SD and abnormal control within 2SD… What is the cause. Control left at room
temperature for a long time.
17. picture of Burr cells. ---- what is the condition of the patient. – Uremia
18. inscription on the volumetric pipette reads 1 +/- 0.006 mL……. What does this mean?
19. prolonged APTT, prolonged PT, Prolonged TT, elevated fibrinogen ------- DIC
20. I was given lab result with glucose having abnormal value, the rest are normal…..what other test needed.
----- A1C.
21. glucose --- positive ; Clinitest ---- negative------ What does the test mean? Urine contains glucose.
23. For the micro part, you need to be familiar with the TSI of enterobacteriaceae. Micro chart from
wordsology is helpful. However, Maricel’s notes are GOLD.
24. A girl with severe normocytic, normochromic anemia but with normal WBC and platelet counts...... Red
cell aplasia
25. gram positive bacteria that is bile positive and NaCl negative---- Strep bovis
26. What is the best test that detects syphilis.. Test that detects syphilis at all phases.
27. Gout; Monosodium Urate; Negative Birefringent (Yellow when parallel. Needle shape).
Pseudogout; Calcium Pyrophosphate; Positive Birefringence (Blue when parallel. Rhomboid shape).
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*lectins
*ABO descrepancies
microscopy
*memorize urinary crystals, either acidic/alkaline
serology/immunology
* serial dilutions <---the only calculation I got
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37. Renal shutdown for diabetic patient. what would be screened first? Choices were: crea, bun, micro
albumin, 24h protein. I don't know the answer. I answered micro albumin lol
38. Double zone bacteria how to confirmation positive reverse CAMP
39. Alpha thalassemia-hgb Bart and Hgb htest.
40. Patient comes in with lesions on arm, given description of what is seen in culture. – I guessed, but I’m
pretty sure it was Sporothrix schenkii
41. specimen for legionella? not so sure about the question but the answer was NASOPHARYNGEAL
SWAB
42. What is the second, irreversible step in platelet aggregation studies? Or something like that. – I had no
idea, guessed change in platelet shape. Upon googling, it seems ‘release of nucleotides’ or something related
would be correct.
43. know PTH effects on Ca+
44. a couple of thrombin/ antithrombin questions
45. a really crappy grainy picuture of what looks like rbc agglutination/flocculation/some other crap … that
sais what should you do next – I chose heinz body stain (actually got this exact pic twice)
46. absolutely no parasitology
47. know (sensitivity = TP/TP +FN) and those others (SPECificity = TN/TN+TP) (PRECISION =
TP/TP+FP)
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Diabetes Mellitus
Impaired fasting
No hyperglycemia (mu choice I am not sure)
13- High Cortisol and ACTH levels - adrenal Cushing’s
14 – This question comes from this group, what can give urine of 4.5 Ph
High protein diet (my choice), salicylic toxicity, vomiting
15. Grave’s - antibodies directed against TSH receptors
16- Primidone – Phenobarbital
17- CO2 electrode measure - PH
18- Antigen is not stable in storage? MN
19- Le(a+b-) – only Lea
20- Mixed field forwarded group - Blood O transfusion
21- Rouleaux is undetectable at what phase – AHG
23- PCR problems – Nucleotides interference
24- Something about D control and Du control
25- Catheter – heparin contamination
26-what indicate not successful streptokinase therapy?
PT of 12 (my choice)
PT of 25
PPT pf 120
D-Dimer positive
27- What is the right position for safety biological cabinet - I choose randomly
28- What cause decrease ESR – vibration of the disk
29- PPT out of control – change the CaCl reagent
30- Normocytic normochromic anemia. Retics is 0.01. – Pure red cell aplasia
31-The second step in platelet aggregation studies – I got two release ADP and something else
32- Big viruses’ case gives you results for EBV, CMV, and Toxoplasmosis. I found IgG and IgM values in
every case so I choose coinfection
33-HbAc1 decrease with – hemolytic anemia
36- Histamine/Heparin? Basophil, Mast cell
37- EPO is decreased in
Polycythemia due to brain something
Polycythemia due to something
Polycythemia vera (my choice)
38- Picture of target cell and hemoglobin C crystals both OMG, after changing the lysing agent what give
false high WBC. I chose target cell I know it resists lysing agent I am not sure.
39- Hair test-T.ruprum and T-manta
40- S. pneumonia identification
41- Aeromonas - Oxidase positive
42- Salmonella subtypes (do not produce H2S) what you do next-type with salmonella group
43- Leuconostoc identification catalase – but not Enterococcus or S.bovis
44- What to do if you have EDTA tube for ABO typing- draw another sample
45-Fletcher’s media- Leptospira
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1. On microscopic exam, wbc were seen but urinary nitrite was negative. What could be the explanation?
A. Wbcs were lymphocytes
B. Bacteria reduced nitrite to nitrogen
*C. Presence of ascorbic acid
D. Diluted urine
2. Picture of burr cells: uremia
3. 2 pictures of rbcs with tear drop cell, hypersegmented neutro and erythrocytes with cytoplasmic inclusion
(acidophilic stained): I answered was g6pd and anti malarial drug. Forgot the questions.
4. What to do with viscous synovial fluid for analysis of crystals?
A. Add hyaluronidase
B. Dilute with saline
C. Dilute with acetic acid
5. Seen in RA (not sure but I answered letter A)
A. IgG attacking Igm RF
B. IgG crystals
6. Child who ingested moth balls? Heinz bodies
7. There was a picture comparison of 3 graphs on platelet aggregation.
Adp, epinephrine and something else. Choices were something like this:
A. Adp and 2 are correct, epi is wrong
B. Adp is correct, 2 and epi are wrong
C. All are correct
8. RBC count, 1:10 dilution and given 2 values.
9. Corrected wbc count. It was a little tricky for me because i didnt memorize the formula and they only
counted 50 wbc so i got confused. But this is the question.
50 wbc were counted manually in a patient with 0.5x10^3/L WBC, 88 NRBC were counted. What is the
corrected wbc count.
10. Picture of spike cell: slide not dry
11. Blood parameters given: aplastic anemia
12. Lupus anticoagulant
13. A problem with px having 35k wbc and lymph 35%, neutro 55%
A. Absolute lymphocytosis
B. Relative lymphocytosis
I answered relative lymphocytosis.im not sure.
14. 2 questions about transferrin and TIBC. Just their definitions.
15. Blood comes positive for htlv 1 iea. What to do? Do confirmatory western blot
16. Individual with past infection but also present jn acute infection? Anti-HBcore
17. Confirm cmv : latex agglutination
18. Recurrent syphilis: vdrl
19. Pheochromocytoma: VMA
20 virus soecimen transport: lyophilized, -65
21. Specimen nasal/throat swab, no growth for h. Influeza: inactivated by sample collector
22. Lewis blood group: easily destroyed
23. Pseudomonas aeruginosa vs putida:
24. Micro of aeromonas (given previously)
25. Increased in mumps: amylase
26. Hair test: t. Menta
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27 alpha thalasemia: hgb bart and hemoglobin h
28. Cushing syndrome : hyperglycemia
29. Gram (-) anaerobe jaw surgery: veilonella
30. Zygomycota picture
31. Walking pneumonia given penicillin but with no relief: bacteria has no cell wall
32. Given TsI: salmonella
33. Proteus vulgaris: indole (+)
34. Erysipelothrix rhustopathiae: butcher somethinf
35. Picture of alternaria
36. Description of geothricium
37.which species of malaria had no schizont and mature troph in peripheral blood?
38. Post prandial lipemia (choices: cholesterol, lipoprotein, fatty acids)
39. Crea clearance but the choices were something to do with BUN
40. 1 antibody panel but not to identify antibody, it was to confirm JF and E and if they were positive or
negative.
41. A px with elevated ALP, unconjugated and total bili, urine bilurubin and urine urobilinogen. All were
elevated and the question, which of the following was out of the picture ( which value should not be high?)
42. Anti Hbe given cut off 0.7 px value 0.3: negative for anti hbe
43. B-hcg 12 or 100 something like that then the question was Usual cut.off for b-hcg? I answered 25.
44. Incidence of anti-k? A. 1<1% B. 10% c. 90% d. 100%
45. If you need 4 rbc which are anti fy and anti k (given fy+ individuals are % in population, and k positive
% population. How many do you need to be able to get a crossmatch? (Forgot the choices but there was 17,
21)
46. How many units do you need to match 6 units of k (+) blood? Something like that. Not sure. But i got 2
questions like this.
47. An osmolality of 300mOSm. Choices were CHF, kidney problem, etc i answered Kidney problem, not
sure.
48. Flurometry (given earlier)
49. Total bb: 3.2
Added caffeine total bb: 5.4
(The values are correct as i remmbered but i forgot how the question was asked.)
Choices: a. Unconj 3.2, con 5.4
B. Uncon 5.4, con 3.2
C. Uncon 2.2, con 3.2
D. Uncon 3.2, con 2.2
50. Got 2 questions about specificity and sensitivity. Like the one here were procedure 2 is more sensitive
and specific.
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Chemistry/Urinalysis
Transudates
Abnormal urine colors
Cast dealing with strenuous exercise
Difference between traumatic tap; hemorrhage
The difference between primary and secondary thyroidism ---TSH
Know your enzymes –ALP AST, LD, etc [Wordsology’s high yield chemistry chart]
Know your Tumor markers --what cancer is associated with it. I got one with hCG—testicular cancer –
[Wordsology’s high yield chemistry chart]
Dilution question
Blood Gasses: Metabolic Acidosis/Respiratory Alkalosis etc. [know reference ranges; clinical conditions]
Procainamide ---NAPA
Immunology
DiGeorge Syndrome- Regarding T-Cell deficiency—Absence of Thymus
CD4: is it a) inducer b) phagocytic c) cytotoxic d) don’t remember the other choice
ANA patterns
Hematology/Coag
Picture of a peripheral blood smear with Plasmodium falciparum
Howell Jolly inclusion picture –what is it composed of? DNA-
One with Pappenheimer Bodies – what do you stain it with? --Confirm with Prussian Blue
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Know what anemias are considered normochromic normocytic
Hemoglobin C disease---Target cells
Picture of a peripheral blood smear with Plasmodium falciparum
APTT; PT – Disseminated intravascular coagulation—Correlating the APTT: PT FIBRINOGEN results
[prolonged or not]
Know what factors are in the Intrinsic and Extrinsic Pathway, mixing studies
Blood Bank
Felt like I had a lot of blood bank questions (my weakest subject) Know how to do panels, DAT/ELUTION/
Subgroups of A
Criteria for Allogenic Donor Selection
CDPA-1 know its advantage
Microbiology/Mycology
Had a question deal with +/- controls for Bile Esculin; CAMP; NACL; Bacitracin [Used Wordology's Gram
Pos Cocci Chart]
picture of Kansassi
Sterilization – 15 lbs –121C
ESBL
TSI reactions for Enterobacteriaceae--Bottom Line Approach Yellow & Purple book
Ziehl-Neilson—hot stain
Rotavirus – stool
Histoplasma capsulatum –tuberculate macroconidia
Sporothrix schenckii—Cigar bodies
Laboratory management:
One question about quality assurance
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Read on PCR, composed of?
What cause decrease ESR – vibration of the disk, not given. Choices where low, high temp, microcycytes,
rouleaux formation
The second phase and irreversible platelet aggregation occurs?– release ADP and dense granules
There was a picture comparison of 3 graphs on platelet aggregation.
Adp, epinephrine and Ca I think. Choices were something like this:
A. Adp and 2 are correct, epi is wrong
B. Adp is correct, 2 and epi are wrong
C. All are correct
Pheochromocytoma: VMA
Gram (-) anaerobe jaw surgery: veilonella
Zygomycota description
Kleb oxytoca: indole (+)
Erysipelothrix rhustopathiae: butcher somethinf
Picture of alternaria
1 antibody panel but not to identify antibody, it was to confirm JF and E and if they were positive or
negative.
Incidence of anti-k? A. 1<1% B. 10% c. 90% d. 100%
If you need 4 rbc which are anti fy and anti k (given fy+ individuals are % in population, and k positive %
population. How many do you need to be able to get a crossmatch? (Forgot the choices but there was 17,
21)
How many units do you need to match 6 units of k (+) blood? Something like that. Not sure. But i got 2
questions like this.
Got one question about specificity and sensitivity. Like the one here were procedure 2 is more sensitive and
specific
Least reaction with anti-H: A1
rotavirus specimen: stool
Stomatocytes: liver disease
Releases histamine/heparin : basophil/mast cell
Tap water: M. gordonae
Autoinfection : Strongyloides
Bilirubin:450 nm
HTLV confirmatory test: western blot
Sezary syndrome: T cells
Ingestion of moth balls: heinz bodies
diff bet. vulgaris & mirabilis= indole + for p.vulgaris
Antibodies not enhanced by enzymes
may hegglin- giant platelets
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ANA pattern- centromere
Latex agglutination for S aureus- protein A and clotting factor
SIADH- dec sodium
malassezia furfur- olive oil
Mumps- amylase
Spikey cells : slides not dry
hepatitis marker
pic of bilirubin crystals
Know the conditions relating to Increase and Decrease PT/APTT
NAPA- Procainamide
Renal Tubular Necrosis – UA result
Micrococcus – F
Nutreint for anaerobic agar
Valinomycin-K
Blood drawn was 369ml, used for? WB
HbAic lowers when RBC life span is shorten
CA 19-9 – Pancreas
In Rhabdomyolysis, breakdown of what component causes kidney damage? – Myoglobin
CLL – B cell
Description of Blastoconidia
Caffeine benzoate- accelerator
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A gram negative bacillus has been isolated from feces and the confirmed biochemical reaction fit those of
shigella. The organism does not agglutinate in Shigella antisera. What should be done next:
- Test the organism with a new lot of antisera
- Rest with Vi antigen
- Repeat the biochemical test
- Boil the organism and retest with the antisera
can you help me how to solve this problem.mean value of series hub controls found 12.5 and the SD was
calculated at 0.20.acceptable range is 2SD.which is the allowable limits for control?
a.14.5-15.5
b.15-15.4
c.15.2-15.6
d.14.8-15.6
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During the past month, Staphylococcus epidermis has been isolated from blood cultures at 2-3 times the rate
from the previous year. the most logical explanation for the increase in theses isolates is that
- the blood culture media are contemned with this organism
- the hospital ventilation system is contemned with S. epidermidis
- There has been a break in proper skin preparation before drawing blood for culture
- a relatively virulent isolate is being spread from patient to patient
Patient that physically appears to be pregnant but the HCG is neg. U/A = decreased SG, protein is trace.
Why is d result negative?
A. Low SG
B. False neg. Bcos of d trace protein.
C. Theres no HCG detectable becos its produced 6-8days after conception.
Analyzer is set to delta check sodium at +/-7. Of these results, which would delta check? (and yes, there
were 2 that would “technically” delta check”)
Day 1: 137
Day 2: 141
Day 4: 132
Day 5: 137
Day 7: 136
Day 8: 142
Day 10: 134
A) Day 1
B) Day 4
C) Day 8
D) Day 10
whole blood collected at 9 am stored at 4C. At 1 pm platelet was prepared. according to AABB, which is
correct regarding about platelets:
- hard spin first
- centrifuge should be at 4-6C
- platelet cannot be prepared
In a random population 16% of the people are RH neg.What is the percentage of the RH pos population in
heterozygous for r?
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A.36%
B.48%
C.57%
D.66%
75x16/25= 48
A urine was read using a refractometer with a specific gravity of 1.010 was read at 10C temp and the
glucose was 1000 mg dl. What to do next?
A. Report the result
b. Correct the specific gravity dut to incorrect temp.
C. Correct the specific gravity due to high glucose
d. Correct temp due to high glucose
On CBC parameter MCV, RDW, RBC PLT, WBC was ok delta failure on HGB, due what
- Instrument malfunction
- tourniquet too tight
- wrong blood was tested
Whole blood donation stops at 390ml (low volume unit), what should be done.. still a whole blood or
PRBC?
Baby o+ from a mother of o- has an HDN and jaundiced. What will be the result?
A. False positive with anti D
b. False negative with anti D
c. False negative DAT
d. False positive dat
If a patient is type A with Lewis a+b- what substance will be on their red cells?
a) Lea
b) Lea+A
c) Lea+A+H
d) Lea+Leb
A patient had a random blood glucose 255 and his FPG > 126 what should we do
a Diabetic
b Repeat FPG
c OGTT
A fasting blood sugar level from 100 to 125 mg/dL (5.6 to 6.9 mmol/L) is considered prediabetes. If it's 126
mg/dL (7 mmol/L) or higher on two separate tests (which is in this case), you have diabetes.
For OGTT pregnant woman who had a FPG 249 mg/dl what is next
A.Report it
B.Consult physician before proceeding
C.Redraw and retest
D.Give dose anyway
6 hours if it is single unit or pooled in closed system ,4 hours if pooled in open system
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A neonate whose cord blood type positive with negative DAT but the mother type AB negative what you
should do:
1-Heelstick 2- do antibody work 3- issue mom vial of rh IG
During a job interview an applicant has the right to refuse to answer if they ask about..
a) address
b) reason why he/she left the previous job
c) provide photograph
d) availability during night shift or weekend
Decrease
Lipemic
Which organism commonly causes food poisoning by consumption of foods containing excessive
populations of organisms or preformed enterotoxin?
Salmonella enteritidis
Shigella sonnei
Bacillus cereus
Escherichia coli
Viral specimen in lab is shipped for 96 hours. What temp should the specimen be kept?
A. ambient temp
B. loefflers serum slant and ref
C. Lyophilize in a serum
D. Ice pack
Series of results of HGb result for 5 consecutive days , result in day 3 is high the others are almost the same
what is the reason
A machine malfunction
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B collected too early
C specimen left standing too long
every other parameter on cbc was ok (mcv,rdw,rbcs,plt,wbc) delta faliure on hgb is due to what
A instrument malfunction
B torniquet too tight
C wrong blood was tested
plasma cells are identified through flow cytometry by their additional expression of CD138, CD78, the
Interleukin-6 receptor and lack of expression of CD45. CD27 is a good marker for plasma cells
in obstructive liver diseases how would the rbc morphology look like?
a- macrocyte
b-microcyte
c-shictocyte
d-tear drop
How much water should we add to 500ml of a solution of 10% of NAOH to bring it to 7.5%?
a. 666
b. 250
c. 166
d. 300
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blood incompatibility transfusion can cause death by
a- ANAPHYLACTIC SHOCK
B- SEPTIC SHOCK
C- HYPOVOLAEMIC SHOCK
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Red blood cells survive around.........days
A. 120
B. 240
C. 10
D. 360
Reticulocytes contain?
1.RNA remnants
2.Howell-Jolly bodies
3.Basophilic granules
4. DNA remnants
a. IgM
b. IgA
c. IgE
d. IgG
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The valency of IgM is.
1) 2
2)4
3)6
4) None of them. (Pentamere)
Which of the following disease is not transmitted through Air borne droplets???
1:Tuberculosis
2:Pneumonia
3:Aids
4:Chicken pox
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c) Haemophilus ducreyi
d) hepatitis
What volume of alcohol can be used to prepare 500ml of 1% acid alcohol? 495ml D/Water & 5ml Acid
Alcohol
A. Pure culture
B. Individual colonies
C. no growth pathogen
D. dense growth which cover plate
inscription on the volumetric pipette reads 1 +/- 0.006 mL... What does this mean?
a. reproducibility
b. precision
c. accuracy
d. calibration
MI pt who was treated with streptokinase, which result suggests treatment didn't work? PT 12, PT 25, PTT
200 or D-dimer +
No reaction on Is,37, ahg,cc and patient control. What is the possible cause?
A. Report thr results
b. Ahg defective
c.serum not added
d. Perform it again
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- role of caffeine in analysis of bilirubin.
-increase of onion gap = respiratory alkalosis ( I'm not sure! )
-blood pressure and body temperature of an acceptable donor.
- ffp refrigerator must be auto defroster.
- patient who was positive for hepatitis B some months ago. Now, have:
- HBsAg:neg
- HBcAg:neg
- HBeAg: neg
- HBsAb:neg
- HBcAb: pos
- HbeAb: neg
What should be done?
- correction of WBC count and Retic.
-hemoglobins in alfa thalassemia major.
-Trait sickl cell anemia and reaction in screning.
-picture of plasma cells in CSF
- Refractometry for SG and radiologic materials. Use strip
- A normal spermogram.
- Chemical changes of CSF and viral/ bacterial/ fongal meningitis
- creatinin clearance and GF relationship.
- ALP and Obstructive jundis.
- Judg between 4 method based on computing correlation coefficient ( SD/Min×100)
-bacteria in a butcher's wound.
-M. Kanzasii is a photochromogen mycobacterium.
Biocahemical characteristics K. Oxitoka.
-Listeria Monocytogenes and neonatal meningitis.
- picture of over infection of P. Falciparum.
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28. Serum osmo. You're given chemistry results, know how to calculate it to come up with a decision to
report the test.
29. Nocordia - musty odor
30. Sezary syndrome - t cell
31. Aplastic anemia image
32. Pure red cell anemia - normal mcv, mch but low hgb.
33. esbl - negative orgnanism
34. Sicke cell - sodium dithimite
35. Bence jones protein
36 plasmodium vivax - duffy
37. Heavy menstral period - tibc normal
38. 2 BB panels. Know how to r/o and see neg results. Hetero or homo. Read the question three or 4 times
very confusing. Many info that they give but you only need a few to answer it.
39. Hiv 1 reactive , hiv 2 non reactive - western blot
40. Pt high glucose - abs - fta
41. Olive oil - malazia fur fur
42. Sensitivity
43. Specificity
44. P falcipirum images
45. Heinz bodies images
46. Cushing syndrome - tsh, acth
49. Hashimoto
50. Mcv calc
51. Mch calc
52. Nephrotic syndrome - alpha 2
53. Cellolose ph 8.4 - hgb A S - D rides with it.
54. Fecal fat test - chromography
54. 1st specimen - 120 glu, 2nd 200 glu, - ogtt
55. Aptt - hemophilia 8
56. Pt going for heart surgery - 72 hrs deferment
57. AST - liver
58. MI - trop
59. Blastocomidia images
60. Ldl
61. Differentiate between salmonella/ shigella
62. Differentiate proteus/ pseudomonas
63. Kliebsiela/e coli - indole test
64. 3 were non lactose fermenters 1 lactose ferm in tube 1 - 4. What is this lactose fermenters? Kliebsiela
65. Strep pneumo gave new anti microbial that didnt know about
66. Staph coag/micrococcus - sensitivity
68. Megaloblastic anemia - mcv high , mchc normo
69. Iron def - microcytic, normo
70. CLL - B lymphocytes
71. ALL - young child
72. Antidiuretic hormone - due to dilution
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73. Acute hepatitis - hbsab
74. Chronic hepatitis - hbcab
75. Micrococcus - furalzolridone resistant
76. Farmers cut but they used buthers - eripelothrix rhisiopathaie
77. Anion gap calculation
79. Corrected wbc calculation. The depth hematocytometer got changed from 0.1 to 0.5.
80. Olive oil - malazezia fur fur
81. Rbc smear monocyte - mycobacterium tuberculosis
82. Organism after the surgery was performed - veillomele
83. Tear drop smear - dna
84. Lab received a swab to culture bacteria and fungus. Something happenned. Its asking what your are
going to do? - i said culture both of them.
85 - 87. 3 more guestions on forward - reverse discrepancy. Simple task not too hard of a question. Do not
memorize. Understand it.
88. Images of of a fus - alternaria
89. What is transferrin?
90 - 92. Conjugated and inconjugated bilirubin - serum and urine chemistry results. What is wrong with the
reporting? Know what increased/dec under different situation.
90. Basic metabolic chemistry results with osmo level of 300. Gave conventional/SI units result. Figure out
what the problem. I recalculated osmolality and came out with a different answer 230. - i picked something
is wrong with the osmo reporting
91. Besides the mrsa antimicrobial they asked what other antimicrobial that a conventional laboratory used -
i didnt know the answer. Unfamiliar antimicrobial.
92. Rbc, hct, hgb results a situation where a pt had clinical problems. I checked rule of 3 - hct was the
problem. i said not to report bec discrepancy.
93. Normal wbc, retic 0.1 - pure red cell
94. Urobilinogen. What makes the color. - i picked clear color.
95. ESR results - i picked table vibrating.
96. Cd 19 and cd 20 - B cell
97. Platelets aggredation - ADP
Released
98. Le a antibody. - absorbed by plasma.
99. Anode with a ph 8.4. Cellular acetate. Know where A S travels - i picked D. Use polansky material.
100. Exactly the last question asked about IFE
101. menstrual period... decrease in ferritin or decrease TIBC? decrease ferritin, increased TIBC
____________________________________________________________________________________
Recall::
Important part to ID dermatophytes
1)macro india
2)chlymydospore
3)blastoconidia
____________________________________________________________________________________
unconjugated/conjugated and urobilinogen, tons of red cell morphology (gave me pics of red cells) with
CBC results and told me to identify the cause, study your anemias!! like 5 or questions about direct and
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indirect fluorescence, immunoassays, a couple on electrophoresis ph, probes for ph and co2, how blood gas
sample is effected if exposed to air, know your enzymes! (Like ALP, AST, CK, etc and where they are
located!) Which electrolytes are affected by hemolysis (all the intracellular ones), Imvic reactions!, know
your media (what they have in them and how they work and how organisms react on them), antibodies
effected by enzyme treatment, warm and cold antibodies, LDL calculation, weight volume calculation (I
think), Manual WBC count formula, difference between histoplasma, urinalysis reagent strip questions
(what causes false pos/negs) rbc cell casts for glomerulonephritis, reference vales for ferritin, iron, CBC
results, ABO discrepancies and how to solve them, when you would use elution/absorption, different
between transudate and exudate, HDFN, beta thalassemia lab values, factor 8 and what would be affected if
it was decreased, protein c question, a question about decreased thrombin levels.
____________________________________________________________________________________
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How long after whole blood donation should plasma be separated from rbc?
2) How long after whole blood donation should platelets be separated from RBCs?
3)Immunology: i had a question where it showed a picture of serum IFE and a gamma band and a light
chain, and told you that the urine light chain had that light chain as well. Then asked what your next action
could be: potential a)multiple myeloma, b)redo it again because c)ULC and d)S-IFE were not the same.
4)effect of IV line on chemistry analytes, a) Diabetes, non-ketoacidosis coma b) enzymes for liver
c)enzymes to help ID muscle problems d)cardiac enzymes
5)Had a picture of a pinworm and needed to know its real name( Answer is Enterobius vermicularis)
6)bilirubin- Absorbance 480nm
7)ISE -KSL
8)the blood glucose was given 390mg/dl, potassium 4.2mmol after insulim administration glucose is 215
potassium is now? Note that this is kot the exact values given
9)how to measure hdl. I chose thin-layer but I really dont know. Ultracentrifugation was not on the choices.
10)A dilution in a tube 1:20 and then you took 2 mL of the dilution and add 3 mL of water, if the result is
120 mg/dl, how many would be the original?
11)A staph like organism is isolated from a wound culture in is resistant to all GPC antibiotics and to
Vancomycin, using the automated bichemical method.
what should the tech do.
a. do a gram stain
b. recallibrate the machine
c. report as not Susceptible?
12)a person overdoses on salicylate and goes to the ER. WHAT WOULD BE TESTED?
a) pH
B) Ammonia
c)creatinine
d) BUN
13)FTA, RPR,VDRL, which is for testing reinfection, late stage and early stage?
14)Which of the following condition is the most common cause of increase anion gap?
A)Metabolic alkalosis
B)Respiratory alkalosis
C)Metabolic acidosis
D)Respiratory acidosis
15)Which of the following analytes is cofactor for most of 300 enzymes?
A)Zinc
B)Magnesium
C)Calcium
D)Potassium
16)Which of the following cells releases histamine/heparin?
A)Neutrophil, Eosinophil
B)Eosinophil, Basophil
C)Basophil, Mastcell
D)Mastcell, Eosinophil
17)Which of the following causes decrease HbA1c?
A)IDA
B)Hemolytic Anemia
C)Sickle cell
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18)Which of the following parasite cause autoinfection in immunocompromised px?
A)S.stercoralis
B)N.americanus
C)A.lumbricoides
D)A.duodenale
19)15)Where heme c and s found… A)Extrinsic B) intrinsic C)warfarin D)heparin
20)Viewing crystals or urine under microscope a) use 10x b) 40 more light c)less light
21)Alkali (that was the exact word )what happens a)co2 b) co3 c)ph
22)Abnormal cells in the bone marrow with a high nucleus to chromatin ratio with few present nucleoli;
choices were a) atypical lymphocytes b)monoblasts c)lymphoblasts
23)What is used to differentiate primary from secondary hypothyroidism; a) T3 b)free T4c)TSH d)TBH
24)31.antacid poisoning,what will you test?a) ph b) ammonia c)k?
25)ketone 1+,bili +1,occult trace.which one is the most pathogenic?
26) what is decrease in females who have their menstrual period?
A)transferrin
B)alt
C)haptoglobin
D)GGt
27)3.8 yr old in er had a alkaline dark brown urine,what do you expect to see in his urine?
A.glitter cells and hyaline cast
B.waxy cast and granular cast
C red cells and red cells
D white cells and white cells
28)How would you differentiate V parahaemolyticus from V cholerae?
A. Sucrose
B Glucose
C Some other sugar
D You can’t
29)10. Decontamination choice for Pseudomonas in AFB culture
A. Oxalic acid
B. NALC
30)8. How would you differentiate Group A from Arcanobacterium?
A. PYR
B. Catalase
C.Oxidase
D. Hemolysis studies
31)Which is the agent of hand foot and mouth disease?
A. Herpes
B. Coronavirus
C. Coxsackie A
D. Reovirus
32)Which is an appropriate specimen to diagnose Dracunculus medinensis?
A.Stool
B. Skin snipping
C.Feces
33)Which of the following is most likely to penetrate through unbroken skin?
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A. Necator americanus
B. Trichuris trichura
C. Enterobius vermicularis
34)2 This catalase positive, gram positive bacilli with diptheroid morphology is highly resistant to many
antibiotics and is associated with immunocompromised patients.
A.)C. diptheriae
B.)C. jeikeium
C.)L. monocytogenes
D.)E. rhusiopthiae
35)1(Picture of S. haematobium)
From which source are you most likely to see this parasite?
A.Urine
B.Feces
C.Blood
D.Sputum
36)What is the cv is the 80-100 mmol/L is within 2SDs (choices: a)5.5% b)10% c)20%)
37)What is the purpose of Protein C and S? (choices: a) act as natural anticoagulant, b)activates protein
coagulants.. etc..)
38)What is the specific gravity of the 3mL urine diluted with 3mL H2O? Specific gravity is 1.024 before
dilution. (choices: a)1.024, b)1.072 c)1.048 etc..)
39)Ran controls and PT was normal, PTT was abnormal. Replaced controls and got same results. What
should you do next?
A) Change out the Recombiplastin
B) Change out the CaCl
C) Rerun controls
D) Run patient tests
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0+1+00
0+1+00
+ 0 0 + / - 2W + / - 2W
+ 0 0 +/ -2W +/-2W
glycolipid absorbed from plasma
69. Ab that deteriorates in storage: P1
70. Choose positive controls to test for anti-c and negative control to test anti-Fy(a): C+c+ for positive
control, Fy(a) for negative control
71. Detection of Ab where 11 tubes resulted NEGATIVE in AHG, but when added CC 4 of them didn’t
agglutinate – machine didn’t dispense correctly the saline in the wash
72.
IS 37 AHG CC
SC1 0 0 0 2+
SC2 +/- +/- 0 2+
Answer: add 4 drops of serum
73. patient DAT (4+), IAT (+), did eluate and the results are DAT (2+) they auto absorb serum and
keeps reacting to SCI1 & SC2 in AHG, what should you do? Panel cells (there was also enzyme
panel cells, report DAT or make another autoadsorption)
74.
Anti-A Anti-B Rh Du Control D
0 0 3+ + -
IS 37 AHG CC
SC1 0 0 0 2+
SC2 0 0 0 2+
Patient cells 0, 0, 2+ not tested presents auto alloAb
75. calculate % of saturation – UIBC 185, Fe 125, TIBC = 185 + 125 = 310 %sat (125/310) * 100 =
40%
76. PT normal, PTT (56), mix 1: plasma (47) factor VIII deficiency
77. Sample taken from indwelling catheter, patient isn’t on anticoagulants yet PTT & TT are way
elevated – HEPARIN CONTAMINATION (from catheter)
78. In the second phase of platelet aggregation what is irreversible? Fibrin formation
79. Control and patient’s PTT elevated, control & patient PT elevated: thromboplastin was added by
error
80.
Anti-A Anti-B A B
4+ 4+ 2+ 2+
What should tech do? First, perform Ab screen w/ autocontrol. If screen &autocontrol = negative THEN
Prewarmb/c cold agglutinins
180.
Anti-A Anti-B A B
0 2+mf 4+ 0
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Discrepancy due to Bx-subgroup
81. HgbA1C – what can be the trouble with the test???decreased life span on RBCs (in the case of
sickle cell)
82. Mycoplasma can’t be treated w/ penicillin = no cell wall
83. Effect of dextran as anticoagulant: destroy D antigen
84. Potassium permanganate: quenching agent
85. Common error in PCR: nucleic acid contamination
86. Low incidence Ag present in blood panel: Wra
87. Surfactant fetal lung maturity – phosphatidyl glycerol
88. Anti-microsomal – hashimoto’sthyroiditis
89. In multichannel analyzer, controls of enzymatic assays are lower than expected values while non-
enzymatic assay controls are within normal limits. What is the probable cause? instrument
temperature may be low
90. Speckled pattern – anti SBB, anti RNP, anti Sm
91. Patient has the results after collecting blood in an indwelling catheter. Patient is not in heparin /
anticoagulant therapy. APTT: abnormal, PT: normal, fibrinogen: 150 mg/dL, what test should be
ordered? Factor XII assay
92. PREDOMINANTLY seen in acute phase of infection but rarely seen in chronic infection? anti-
HBc, IgM
93. Adrenal cushing syndrome – TSH decrease, cortisol increase
94. Deferred donor: Hepatitis Ig six months ago
RECALLS
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Nucleolar ANA pattern –
answers: presence of cold antibodies
infection w/ Mycoplasma pneumoniae
Bile Esculin + Catalase - No growth @ 6.5% NaCl – Streptococcus bovis(group D), endocarditis &
colorectal cancer
Specific gravity 1.010 using refractometer at 4C result glucose 1000mg/dL – correct the specific
gravity due to high glucose
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aPTT control out but PT within normal range – change CaCl2 reagent
Organism isolated in Hektoen Agar TSI K/A, H2S (+), PAD (-), lysine decarboxylase (-), urea(+),
citrate (+) tech report as NORMAL FLORA
Instrument linearity something about comparing means – paired T-test
Postprandial lipemia: Lipoprotien
Whole blood donation stops at 365 mL: pRBC(walanangnagsasalinnang WB)
Le(a) Le(b) IS 37 AHG
0+1+00
0+1+00
+ 0 0 + / - 2W + / - 2W
+ 0 0 +/ -2W +/-2W
Detection of Ab where 11 tubes resulted NEGATIVE in AHG, but when added CC 4 of them didn’t
agglutinate – machine didn’t dispense correctly the saline in the wash
IS 37 AHG CC
SC1 0 0 0 2+
SC2 +/- +/- 0 2+
Answer: add 4 drops of serum
patient DAT (4+), IAT (+), did eluate and the results are DAT (2+) they auto absorb serum and
keeps reacting to SCI1 &SC2 in AHG, what should you do? make another autoadsorption)
25.
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SC1 0 0 0 2+
SC2 0 0 0 2+
Patient cells 0, 0, 2+ not tested presents auto or allo Ab
26. calculate % of saturation – UIBC 185, Fe 125, TIBC = 185 + 125 = 310 %sat (125/310) * 100 =
40%
27. PT normal, PTT (56), mix 1:1 plasma (47) factor VIII deficiency
28. Sample taken from indwelling catheter, patient isn’t on anticoagulants yet PT PTT & TT are way
elevated – DIC
29. In the second phase of platelet aggregation what is irreversible? ADP release
30.
Anti-A Anti-B A B
4+ 4+ 2+ 2+
What should tech do? First, perform Ab screen w/ autocontrol. If screen &autocontrol = negative: wash
then retest(walangprewarmsa choices)
31.
Anti-A Anti-B A B
0 2+mf 4+ 0
Discrepancy due to Bx-subgroup
32. HgbA1C – what can be the trouble with the test??? decreased life span on RBCs (in the case of
sickle cell)
33. Mycoplasma can’t be treated w/ penicillin = no cell wall
34. Common error in PCR: nucleic acid contamination
35. Adrenalcushing syndrome – TSH increase, cortisol increase
36. Deferred donor: Hepatitis Immunoglobulin six months ago
37. In multichannel analyzer, controls of enzymatic assays are lower than expected values while non-
enzymatic assay controls are within normal limits. What is the probable cause? instrument
temperature may be low
38. Patient has the results after collecting blood in an indwelling catheter. Patient is not in heparin /
anticoagulant therapy. APTT: abnormal, PT: normal, fibrinogen: 150 mg/dL, what test should be
ordered? Factor XII assay
39. Mycoplasma pneumoniae causes walking pneumonia:(no cell wall)
40. Latex agglutination staph aureus – clumping factor & protein A
41. False DECREASE ESR – delay 8 hrs in set up
42. Prolonged apnea – Pseudocholinesterase
43. Specimen rotavirus – Stool
44. Specimen Legionella – Urine antigen
45. Cushing’s syndrome – Hyperglycemia
46. Increased Ca and normal PTH – Metastatic carcinoma
47. Primedone – Phenobarbital
48. Low sodium – Hyperglycemia
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49. Low sodium normal other electrolytes – repeat ion selective electrode
50. Low erythropoietin – Polycythemia vera
51. PT normal (patient for gall bladder surgery), PTT prolonged, TT normal: Factor XII assay
52. Cbc result: about method 1, method 2 – Lyse resistant in Hgb C
53. quantitative fecal fat test – Weight & Extraction
54. absent trophozoite / merozoite – PLASMODIUM FALCIPARUM
55. Lupus anticoagulant – causes Thrombosis
57. UA results: 25 – 30 renal tubular epi cells acute tubular necrosis
58. Bacteria gram + cocci Catalase - LAP (-), bile esculin (+), NaCl (growth), PYR (-) Resistant to
vancomycin – Leuconostoc
59. Carbon dioxide ion selective electrode measure – CO2 (pressure)
60. Monocytosis seen in tuberculosis
61. FBS:120, OGTT: 140 – Impaired glucose
62. Patient with fasting blood glucose 155mg/dL& after 2 hours 225 mg/dL - DM
63. Hair perforation test differentiates: Trichophyton mentagropytes and Trichophyton rubrum
64. 18.5 % retics – Heinz body stain
65. 0.1% retics normal RBC and PLT – Pure red cell aplasia
66. Streptokinase therapy does not work in myocardial infarction – D-dimer positive
67. multiple lesion of arm, cigar bodies – Sporothrixschienkii
68. RBC: 3.6 HGB: 14 HCT: 33%, manual hct 33.5% in manual – Lipemic (does not follow rule of 3)
69. Rbc in reagent strip, none seen in microscope: Diluted ALKALINE urine
70. Blastoconidia – mother & daughter cells budding
71. CSF storage in subsequent culture – incubate at 35C temp
72. Pink colony on MAC agar, LOA -++: Enterobacter cloacae
73. CA 19-9: pancreatic marker
74. Increased hemolytic anemia – increased UNCONJUGATED bili, Normal Bilirubin increased
urobilinogen
75. EIA HTLA ½ reactive, what to do next? – Western blot
76. False NEGATIVE ABO– incubation at 37 degcelcius (ABO Ab are IgM it reacts at RT)other
answers Positive DAT
77. Anti-IgG NEGATIVE, anti C3D POSITIVE – wash with warm saline
78. Echinocytes picture – faulty to dry the slide
hindiganitoyungitsurabastamakikitanyosyapagbinasanyoagadyung slides
kahitbasasyaganunyungitsura.
79. Glucose reagent strip : + Clinitest : + : Expired Strip is my answer cause if glucose is present it
should also give positive Clinitest bec its also a reducing agent. Other choices are Positive for
Glucose, Patient has taken Ascorbic Acid and presence of Galactose
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BLOOD BANK
2. What is RHOGAM, when are you going to give it and what will it do to the patient?
3. In an emergency, what blood type of blood would you give if the red cells are needed or plasma is
required and the blood type is unknown?
4. Would you phenotype a patient who had been transfused within the last 3 months?
CHEMISTRY
1. Potassium is high but the blood sample plasma is not hemolyzed, patient does not show any symptoms,
what do you think happened?
2. Control was high even after you have repeated it, what's the next step that you would do?
3. Intepret a QC graph..you should know about trends, shifts, what would you do to resolve the problem.
HEMATOLOGY
1. MCV was 85 yesterday, today it was 77, what do you think happened and how would you solve the
problem?
2. What causes high MCHC, explain step by step how you would solve the problem if the MCHC is 380 ?
3. What causes falsely low platelet count and what would you deal with it?
4. What causes false low WBC count, falsely low WBC count, how would you solve the problem?
5. What causes false increase in hemoglobin, how would you solve the problem?
A postpartum female with a history of transfusions tests positive for Anti-D. What is your next step?
I couldn't remember the possible choices word for word on that one, but I do remember that 3 of them you
could rule out just by thinking about it.
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A patient's serum is known to have anti-Jkb, but anti-K and anti-C can't be ruled out. Specific antigen testing
was performed on the patients cells and the results are as follows.
Anti-K Anti-C
0 2+
The same antibody was found in 3 different patients. The results of testing is listed below. Which antibody is
most likely to be present?
IS 37 AHG
patient 1 0 2+ 0
patient 2 2+ 0 0
patient 3 0 0 2+
A) Anti-Jkb
B) Anti-K
C) Anti-M
D) Anti-Leb*
Although I can't remember the wording or answers for another question, I do remember that they showed
results of screen cells 1 and 2 being negative for any antibody, but then when doing a crossmatch, an
antibody showed up. I said the answer was that the patient has a low incidence antibody.
1. This is a platelet vessel wall interaction, bleeding time prolonged, platelet count decrease and on
peripheral smear the platelets are increase in size.
c. Congenital afibrinogenemia
d. Glanzmann's thrombasthenia
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2.Alpha hCG marker of malignancy:
a. Choriocarcinoma
b. Testicular Cancer
c. Pancreatic (answer)
d. Nonseminomatous
3.If the protein elevation from B1B2 and gamma are to merge together, what immunoglobulin would I
indicate?
a. IgM
c. IgD
d. IgE
5.What is RHOGAM, when are you going to give it and what will it do to the patient?
6.In an emergency, what blood type of blood would you give if the red cells are needed or plasma is required
and the blood type is unknown?
7.Would you phenotype a patient who had been transfused within the last 3 months?
8.Potassium is high but the blood sample is not hemolyzed, patient does not show symptoms what do you
think happened?
9.Control was high even after you repeat it, what’s the next step that you would do?
20.Which product we should use when the patient has fever when transfusion the blood?
b. Irradiated RBC
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c. Wash RBC
22.Blood culture in aerobic and an anaerobic bottle are negative, but in gram stain smear shows gram
positive bacteria. What should you do next?
23.After 2 days of blood culture, technician found gram positive cocci, what should you do next?
a. Crystals
b. Protein (answer)
c. immunoglobulin
25.Mother Rh(-), but DAT(+) her baby is Rh (-). What is the reason for discrepancy?
26.Mother B Rh(-), Father AB Rh (+). Child 1 A Rh(-) Child 2 B Rh (+). Which is correct
27.Produce #1 detected 50/100 true positive and 100/100 true negative. Produce 2# detected 80/100 true
positive and 70/100 true negative
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a. Produce 1 is more sensitive
28.TP/TP +FN =?
a. Sensitivity
b. Specificity
c. Precision
d. Variance
29.What might the following indicate? Urine: RBCS, WBCs, nitrite, bacteria.
b. Glomerulonephritis- renal disease usually affects both kidneys. Blood or protein in urine.
c. Nephrotic syndrome - Nephrotic syndrome is a group of symptoms that include protein in the urine,
low blood protein levels, high cholesterol levels, high triglyceride levels, and swelling
30.Why is albumin the first protein to be detected in tests for renal failure?
Corr wbc count with 50 cells ( I changed it to wbc X 50 divided by (nRbcs + 100),
Blood bank discrepancies, panels, enzymes, what to do next, check freezer temp every 4 hrs!
cocaine metabolite, moth ball intoxication ( i guessed basophilic stippling still cant find it)
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screw therap drugs and monitoring not useful
know which anemias are micro/macro/hypo/hyper, I calculated rbc indices to rule out answers.
density of proteins in decreasing to ascending order I dunno what IDL is but I put it in between VLDL and
LDL.
Normal total CK but increase in troponin in what? (got it down to unstable angina or acute M.I)
urine from catheter rapid analysis only need to setup which two plates for micro?
c-reactive protein
what stain to see the cells in the cast? i said oil red o only one that made sense
picture of dysmorphic rbcs and asked why (got it down to oxidizing drugs or antimalarial drug)
one said strep b was neg on CAMP test w/ s. aureus, do what next (do biochem rxns for b or run CAMP with
beta lysin s. aureus I chose this)
at end of protein electro which is closest to the cathode (gamma and beta)
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asked about a csf electrophoresis showing anodal band to albumin (picked normal results)
had 2 questions, one which increases/or falsley inc hgA1c and what decreased A1c (i think Hgb S is one of
the answers)
high pH and something but what enzyme (Pagets was the answer b/c ALP (Alkaline pH)
which dermatophyte has antler like pseudohyphae (wtf??) got this wrong
strep a in glomerularnephritis
morganella vs providencia
PCR
measure HDL?
baby w RH+ O mom w Rh- O baby need transfusion what blood should give?
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muscle dystrophy what enzyme increase
anaerobic bacteria
proteus,klebsiella rxn
I had a few that had to do with interpreting bili results and what is causing them
math calculation...something like, how many grams are needed to make a 3% solution of NaCL.
Calculate LDL
What do you do if you see your coworker ...gosh I can't remember what my coworker was doing but it was a
silly question. I chose tell my supervisor?
There were a few questions of interpreting lab results to determine which anemia
2) PAS stain negative and sudden black stain positive what disease.
8) What is standard practice. A) student read parasite slide that instructor gave them B) student memorize
coag cascade and gave exam C) student fix instrument after reading operator manual.
12) This spiral-form organism is seen in urine and cultured on Fletcher’s media.
13) Synovial fluid collected in anticoagulant tube, what do you use to dilute the specimen?
14) HBa1c levels control , but glucose levels high today why?
17) Rh- mother has increase titer of anti-D. After delivery, the DAT is strongly (+) but the baby is Rh- a)
inadequate washing b) added monoclonal anti-D sera instead of anti globulin (or vise versa) c) or maternal
antibodies blocking the antigenic site
20) Bhcg is negative and patient think she is pregnant, but all test are negative.
22) Disease associated with the following results? Elevated TSH; Elevated T3; Elevated free T4
- What causes false positives and false negatives on urine reagent strip tests (protein, blood etc).
- Platelet Aggregation Studies (be able to interpret graphs and determine disease states)
- RBC inclusions (stains used for each, where each comes from, disease states commonly seen in each)
- Know biochemical characteristics for ALL bacteria (to make it easier group them into GNR, GNC, GPR,
GPC, ANAEROBES, MYCOPLASMA)
- I didn't study mycology or parasitology, but there were 3 questions (pictures to identify). If you know what
it looks like you'll be okay. I didn't study it, I didn't know the answers, I guessed, probably failed the
questions, but passed the exam :-)
- Immunohematology: can you give incompatible Cryo? How long after thawing can you administer
platelets, plasma etc. How long after pooling?
- RhIg (when do you administer? what does a positive anti-D postpartum mean? When do you do weak D
testing? Know EVERYTHING about RhIg)
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- Serology: know Hepatitis B antigen AND antibodies. When does each appear? during which clinical
phase? (HBe, HBsAg, HBcAg etc).
I had mostly blood bank and coagulation. I had one panel that was asking in a roundabout way about the
antibodies properties( I think it was Le(b). Everything thing else was a discrepancy(mother AB neg, Baby
typed O pos), A2 subgroup, positive Weak D control, Autoabsorption, neg DAT at room temp but was
positive five minutes later.
Coagulation was mostly lupus anticoagulant( ptt did not correct, patients form clots, russell viper test to
confirm). Also had a question about the indication of failure of streptokinase. Best test to monitor heart
surgery patients.
Microbiology: Salmonella biochemicals and TSI reactions. Enterobacter vs Klebsiella( know species E.
Cloacae, E. Aerogenes, K. oxytoca, K pneumoniae). Enterococcus vs Streptococcus( Bile esculin, growth in
salt, PYR). Salmonella species was serotyped as so species of Salmonella but did not produce hydrogen
sulfide and was lysine negative, what would you do? Subacute endocarditis,
Hematology: Calculate RBC indices, two questions with pictures of rbc agglutination( M. pnuemoniae
infection/ cold agglutinin disease). Picture of smear with white blood cells and choosing appropriate
stain( Sudan black vs esterase, nonspecific esterase etc.) Conditions affecting ESR( false increase/decrease)
Osmotic fragility results(predict blood smear results). Two hematology analyzers with different lysing
agents had varying white cell counts( showed a smear with target cells and HGB C crystals. Which one
affects RBC lysing)
immunology: hepatisis results, two ANA patterns, principle of IFA, out of VDRL for CSF and using RPR
kit(What would you do?)
chemistry: diagnostic criteria for diabetes mellitus, primary vs secondary cushings, finding concentration
from asorbance reading, coefficient of variation and SD interpretation, percent recovery, blood gas analyzer
issues and measurements, BNP for what conditio
Patient has impaired fasting glucose and 2 hr- what would you do next?
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Lots of coat questions- lupus anticoagulant, what does coumadin act on? Coag controls are high, what can it
be contaminated with?
Some fluid questions and questions about heme results associated with CHF
Micro- A couple mycology questions with pictures, olive oil is needed to grow what fungus, a lipid chain is
added to culture to grow what? What is added to a plate that you wish to grow gram negative rods. A
salmonella question. Picture of TB with a small description- which species? How are viruses transported?
HbV results- what stage? Gram neg anaerobic cocci is? Nocardia stain results- Role of potassium permag in
staining.
Blood bank- These were tricky, lots of "Dce/dCe"type questions about what percentage would be ok for
transfusing if a certain genotype was pos/neg. Lots of ABO discrepancies, panel cells all positive, but neg
check cells,
2.) be able to identify IGG/IGM and which is displayed graphically. The exact same graph is in the Patsy
Jarreau book.
3.) 120 lb malnourished man is seen in the ER. What would be indicative of his condition? listed were BUN,
OSMOS, CRP, HAPTOGLOBIN. they all had abnormal values next to them, but i can't remember.
5.) I got A LOT of questions about iron deficiencies. be able to identify iron deficiency, hemachromatosis,
etc..
6.) This is seen in alpha thalssemia. choices- increased A2 and F, Barts and H disease, persistence of F
8.) CSF electrophoresis and multiple sclerosis. Choices- IgG Monoclonal, IgM Monoclonal, IgG
Oligcolonal, IgM Olicolonal
9.) Patient comes in on a sunday and AB screen neg and receives on unit, following wednesday SC III is
positive in the AHG phase. Choices- recollect, assume AB and ID for AB, perform autoabsorbtion, re-test
sample from sunday
11.) you perform daily maintenance and you get the message "excessive shift" for K. what do you do?
Choices- Assay new control, replace membrane, recalibrate, clean ISE.
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12.) Patient has been coming in the past 5 days getting blood draw and on 3/19 his hemoglobin suddenly
drops. Why? Choices-lipemia, chronic anemia, iron deficiency, wrong patient. Everything else matched just
hemoglobin was significantly changed.
13. Automated hematocrit was 33.0 you perform a manual and you get 33.5. Choices- report automated
result, redraw specimen, report manual, etc.
14.) bacili is seen microscopically in urine, but nitrite portion of strip is neg why?
19.) know what enzymes are increased in biliary obstruction, hepatitis, cardiac etc.
20.) positive control for hcg is weakly pos and negative is neg. Patient result is positive. choices- release
results, rerun controls with new control batch, recollect patient sample.
-supravital stain,
-discrepancy
-crytococcus neoformans
-fungus
-ldl calcul
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-cardiac markers
-ABO type
-autoadsorption
-falses resuts after 3 assays in the lab,what to do? they did well everything before the lab test.
blood splited on the floor,what to do?clean by yourself? call the supervisor?call the call the safety and ......
department to let them know?
-clerical error
I had 3 antibody panel 1 regarding exchange blood transfusion, 1 about AHG reagent,1 about baby's
antibody coated with mom's antibody, and 1 calculation with how many units of blood be matched if there
are 66% of anti K and 25% anti E.
Clini test, salmonella paratyphie serotyped biochemical reaction, fungus that requires olive oil to grow,
manual RBC count, RHG immunoglobin calculations, coccaine metabolite, moth ball poisoning, serratia
biochemical rxn discrapancy,abo discrapancies, performing cold autoadsorbtion on Anti A1 patient RBC is
forward is A and reverse is O, Baby has toxoplasma; best to test mother or baby?, Hepatitis C all antibodies
increased,how many units to transfuse for Anti-Kell,one analyzer gives low WBC count the other gives a
high count,what to do next?,coefficient of variation calculation,Synovial fluid yellow due to what?,Turbid
synovial fluid due to what?, Pheripheral blood picture with acanthocyte and tear drop cells Diagnosis?, alpha
thalessemia; what HB is increased,HBc is resistant to which diluent, prolonged PT and APTT during
surgical bleeding, all tests are normal, what will u do next?, coumarin therapy, corynebacterium sp beta
hemolytic and motile, glucose fermentation of veolena, peptstreptococcus, micrococcus. TIBC HUS, picture
of gram negative bacilli with gliding motility, treatment for syphilis reinfection other choices were antibody
tests, Antibody ID and report what to do next; had jka and k so had to do selective panel. cryo thawed at
2pm requested at 3, what will you?issue or not?.
ABO and Rh incompatible platelet pheresis donor platelet range should be more than 250,350 or >500,000?.
blood grouping of patient with Anti P antibody,m auto is pos?, To make a good pos control,Anti E should
be? DCE/dce?, mixing study not able to fix PT and APTT due to what?? lupus anticoagulant or unknown
inhibitor.Extremely low platelet, PT + APTT normal? DIC??. Amylase low due to what? lipemia or decrease
in lipase as well?. howel jolly bodies picto, glomerulonephritis due to what? Efaecalis or Strept,
cardiobacterium grams staining, oral contraceptives on iron stores, TIBC and loss of blood, known alcoholic
with arrythemia, test for what HBA1C or GTT? Toxoplasma gondii latexx test beads to ricketts. antibodies
dealing with pregnancies. mother rh negative, baby rh positive, hemolysis due to what? sodium decreased,
potassium normal, test for what next, magnesium? or could be due to kidney disease?. woman with
abdominal pain- pancreatitis or appendicitis? bunch of biochemical rxns for shigella, proteus and serratia
with discrapancy in reactions. melassessia furfur, sprothrix schenkii, histoplasma capsulatum. transportation
temp for RBCs,best method for transporting viruses for culture
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which factor does coumarin affect? blood picture if whole blood is left at room temperature for 8 hours,
what will be affected? bizzare wbc?creanetd rbc? HBc?. Is it possible to test for glucose on from a lithium
heparin tube after refridgeration and separation from rbc? I answered yes to this one. Platelet graph
aggregation with epinephrine and 3 other hormones, had to select the correct graph. organism innoculated on
skin, after 3 days inflammation on the site of innoculation due to what? monocyte, tcellm bcell?.
spectrophotometer color of bulb orange and red,why??. drugs measured using what, Nepho atomic
spectro?..1 unit of whole blood transfused, what is frst to increase? RBC,HB,retics, mcv??TIBC transferrin
measure if HB is decreased HB electophoresis questions. did not get any hepatic questions or ANA
questions.had anti ID panels, super easy to do. make sure you are really good in Blood banking, they are
worth the most points. i passed because of blood banking
1.What bacteria will show positive and negative for the following. Bile esculin, 6.5na, Camp, bacitracin. I
choose s.pyogenes, S. Agalactia, enterococcus . Other option has s. Virdian, S. Aureus...
4. Anti body panel that had anti k. How would the panel show specific or sensitivity can't remember. I
choose run enzyme panel not sure is that correct.
6. A questions who's had odd results for glucose, sodium, BUN. What would be affected osmolslity 2na +
glucose/20+!bun/3
13. Picture of histoplasma, and one about fluid being drained from the lungs.
18. Chromogenic agar I think. It was a picture of a agar one side clear organism had different color sheep
blood agar all agate looks the same
23. Group A pod mother had and miss carriage d neg, weak d beg... Is the patient a candidate for rhig
24. I have to calculate diagnose for rhig twice. Whole blood divide by 30. Rbc by 15
31. Cryo store at RT from 2pm pt scheduled to be transfused at 3pm what would you do?
1.-Procainamide: NAPA
2.-ABO discrepancie I remember.A4+B0 O0 A0 B0 O0
3.- how differentiate Proteus Mirabilis and P Vulgaris.
4.-cloride shift-HCO3-Cl-
5.- A sample that was collected in gray tube for chemistry. what to expect.
6.- which anticoagulant should I use for coagulation studies.
7.- malaria in blood.
8.- peppenrhimer bodies
9.- Falciparum
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10.-AFT as cancer marker
11.-what is increased in Hemolytic anemia? its as Unconjugated billirubin, iron, TIBC
12.-Gram + Bacili, Branching, CATALASE – partially acid fast— that was easy– Nocardia
13.-Oxidase -, Catalase+ Indole – H2S+ i thought it was Salmonella
14.- difference between primary and secondary thyroidism —TSH
15.Cushing sydrome-cortisol increased
16.- ALP increased when
17.-it was a line with for pictures i have to pick if they were in acid or basic urine
there where also some from bilirubin, some parasites, but no calculations for me.
the infective form
the first thing I did was wrote down all the bacter charts just in case. and the antibodies and ABO
discrepancies because studied them from here. was easier to remember.
I cannot remember more but if i do i will come back
Thank you for this web site, it really helped me i read every single post and question.
For Micro: I studied high yield notes micro here, then went through micro review section bacteria from Harr
book. Don’t forget to study all micro recalls from here.
For Blood Bank: I studied high yield notes from here. Then reviewed all section of BB from Harr. Some
questions from BOC very helpful: 18, 20, 30, 175, 228, 231, 244, 246, 247, 248, 250, 252, 259, 272, 274,
283, 289, 293, 301, 306, 315.
For Chemistry: I studied high yield notes from here. all recalls from here. and studied review section from a
Bottom line approach.
Hematology and coagulation: I studied high yield notes from here and review section from a Bottom line
approach. All recalls from here.
Urinalysis, BF, immunology: I studies high yield notes, recalls from here. Bottom line approach.
Blood Bank:
1. a patient is group A Rh negative and anti-Le(a-b+), what antigen patient have:
A, H, Le(b+)
5. Given result: DAT poly = 0, DAT C3= 3+, what should the tech do?
Report DAT positive.
6. Given result of antibody ID, All 11 tubes AHG= Negative, then added Check cells, 4 tubes did not given
agglutination.
What happened? the wash machine did not dispense correctly volume of saline.
9. ABO discrepancy:
anti-A anti-B A1 B
4+ a+ 1+ 1+
what should tech do? incubation at room temperature.
13. Mother: O Negative has anti-D, anti-C, previously known has anti-LeA
Baby: A postive, DAT = 3+
15. Given table panel red cells: choose positive control for anti-c (little c) and negative control for anti-FyA:
C+c+ for positive control for anti-c, and FyA- FyB+ for negative control for anti-FyA.
For laboratory:
For Micro: you must remember diagram of high yield notes, I have about 10 questions and few they are not
from high yield notes such as:
1. patient has cat scratch: GNB, low grade fever, enter ED.
a. Pasteurella multocida ( this for cat or dog bite)
b. Bartonella henselae ( I picked this one)
c. Steptobacillus moniliformes
d. toxaplasmo
2. Child suspected has “walking” pneumonia, doctor description penicillin, two weeks later the child still
sick, what happened?
the organism mycoplasma doesn’t have cell wall.
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I have 4 questions of Mycology, 1 questions of Parasitology:
2. What dimorphy yeast have description branch like mother and daughter?
Blastomyces dermatitis
5. What Plasmodium doesn’t have stage of Schizont and Trophozoite in blood smear?
P. falciparum ( have ring and banana shape?)
Procainamide=NAPA
P.aeroginosa vs. P. putida = choices ; 1. pyoverdin, 2. growth @ 42C (answered #2 not sure)
Growth in olive oil = M. furfur
Picture of stomatocytes= liver disease
Whats in the saliva of Le (a+b-)= answered Lea( not sure) other choices include H and A
Specimen of choice for whopping cough = nasopharangeal swab
Zygomycetes description
Creatinine clearance calculation
ABO typing discrepancies (5 items or more )
Before addition of caffeine bilirubin = 3.2 after addition of caffeine bili = 5.4 = what is the conjugated and
unconjugated bilirubin result
Abnormal acetaminophen result ( increased) what other relevant test mus be performed
Choices are 1. bun 2. crea 3. salicylate
Cryoprecipitate storage after thawing
Will you preapare platelet concentrate from wholeblood stored in ref for 24hours?
Picture of hypersegmented neutrophil = condition associated with it
Picture of burr cells = condition associated with it
Antibody panels = identify the unit to be transfused
Patient for coagulation study has 67% hematocrit what would you do.
Choices include 1. recollect with reduced anticoagulant 2. proceed with test 3. recollect with increased
anticoagulant
Procainamide: NAPA
BHCG tumor marker for what? Not sure but I answered chorocarcinoma. Cos the three choices were
pancreatic, colon and lungs
MCV calculation
5HIAA carcinoid tumors
I had 5 bb panels (was thinking maybe this was the reason I failed. Although I did understand but the
questions were a bit confusing. Not sure with my answers)
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Proteus vulgaris and mirabilis indole tests
Bb and Heme Case studies
Hydatid cyst fluid
Rh stuff
ABO descripancies
Antacid overdose? What lab test should you conduct?
Ouchterlony reading
-coagulation
-Prolonged PT, PTT, and thrombin after collecting from catheter= heparin contamination
– Question with mixing study that was performed with a prolonged PTT that couldn’t be corrected=
DRVVT
-Another question with two pt’s ran in duplicate (PT and PTT). The PTT seemed to always be prolonged but
PT looked ok= I picked check the CaCl/phospholipid reagent delivery
– Patient is on coumadin therapy, what will be affected= Decreased protein C
-Hematology-
-Lot’s of stomatocytes= liver disease
-Burr cells= uremia
-Picture of target cells with hemoglobin C crystals. The white count was high on instrument 1, so a second
instrument was used with a stronger lysing agent, and the white count was corrected= I picked anti-lysing
target cells are what increased the white count.
-A sodium citrate tube was drawn for a HCT on a pt but the hematocrit was abnormal. Options were
recollect in heparin (what I picked), recollect with increased anticoagulant, recollect with decreased
anticoagulant, etc.
-Question that gives a red blood cells count, HGB, and HCT. I did the rule of 3 and found that the HGB
didn’t meet the rule of 3 because it was too high= I picked check for lipemia (elevates HGB)
-Picture of PBS with an elevated reticulocyte count and howell jolly bodies in the RBC’s.= I picked stain
with prussian blue stain in order to see the retic nuclei
-what is composed of DNA?=howell jolly bodies
-what falsely decreases ESR=vibration
-ESR is increased, what is NOT a cause=I picked macrocytes because macrocytes don’t rouleux. Other
options were rouleux, increased globulins, inflammation, etc.
-Chemistry-
-Question about lactic acid collection=separate from serum and put on ice
-Question about coefficient of variation
-Carbon dioxide electrode measures what?= pH
-Question about patient that had a random glucose >200 and an FPG >126. What do you do next?= I picked
repeat the FPG. Other options were diagnose with diabetes mellitus, perform OGTT, etc.
-Immunology-
-Man tested positive for syphilis 2 years ago but may have again, how would you test him?-RPR
-Question with a graph with 3 peaks related to a bacterial infection= I picked that the first peak was the
antigen in the stool, the second peak was IgM (goes up and then down quickly), and the third peak was IgG
(goes up and levels off a little).
-Person tested positive for HIV-1 and HIV-2 but western blot was indeterminate. What do you do?= I picked
do CD4 count. Other options were repeat western blot, repeat HIV-2, etc.
-Blood Bank- It felt like I had a lot of questions
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– 1 small antibody ID panel. The antibodies that matched up were Lewis A Lewis B. Question asked about
the characteristics of the antibodies.= I picked that they are lipids absorbed onto RBC from plasma.
– There was a positive DAT on cord blood; mother is Rh pos, baby is Rh neg. What is most likely coating
the baby’s red cells?= I picked K (kell). Other options were A&B, D, Lewis, etc.
-Picture of what looks like cold agglutinins (I got this picture 2 different times during the test).= The first
time I picked cold reacting antibody. The second time the options were different so I went with Paroxysmal
cold hemoglobinuria. Mycoplasma infection was an option but there wasn’t a lot of WBC’s in the picture so
I didn’t pick Mycoplasma.
-What phase can rouleux not be detected in?= I picked AHG phase because a positive 37C, negative AHG,
and positive auto=rouleux
-Picture of ABO type with mixed field reaction in the forward type= I picked that patient was transfused
with O blood
-Picture of AB in forward reaction, and weak reactions in back type= I picked incubate at room temp
because probably cold agglutinins
-Question about an adsorption that had been done twice, and antibody screen is positive=I picked perform
antibody ID panel
-If a patient is type A with Lewis a+b- what substance will be on their red cells= I picked Lewis a but other
options were (A, Lea), (H, A, Lea), (Lea,Leb), etc.
-Micro- no parasite questions, 2 mycology questions
– Only 1 micro picture. Bile esculin +, NaCl-, alpha hemolytic, looked like a strep=Group D strep
gallolyticus/bovis
-TSI slant K/A H2S+, PD-,= Salmonella antisera was only organism that fit
-Question with lactose fermenter, ODC+, lysine -, etc.=Enterobacter cloaca but I’m not sure
-Rotavirus= stool
-CSF storage= incubate at 35C
-Hair perforation test= Trichophyton metagrophyte and T. rubrum
-Good way to detect Legionella infection=antigen detection in urine
-Question about a lesion on an arm= I picked sporothrix schenckii but I’m not sure. Other options were
cryptosporidium, microsporum, etc.
-Mycoplasma can’t be treated with penicillin= no cell wall
1. Need to pipette .5ml of specimen, what do you use—Volumetric, Erlenmeyer, or Serologic pipette. I
picked serologic.
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2. When to give Rhogam—Gave various types with moms Anti-X found. I picked Mother Neg with baby
pos mother has Anti-C
3. Cold antibody—Anti-I
4. Gave two more ABO discrepancies and how to resolve them—Rouleaux seen microscopically use Saline
replacement technique
(Recommend http://www.austincc.edu/mlt/bb/bbLab3ABO_DSpring2012.pdf)
5. ABO discovery: Landsteiner
6. According to Beers law- directly proportional to the amount of light absorbed, or inversely proportional to
transmitted light.
7. One question that kind of tripped me up was mom was type BO- and father was OO- the results of the
baby appeared AB+ asked what to do… Since this isn’t possible I figured mom messed around and still
chose to report it, instead of any type of correction.
8. Dce/dce – R0/r
9. QC +/- of bacteria question- I picked oxidase- E.Coli and pseudomonas
10. Cell line question with multiple listed, anisocytosis and ovalcytes stuck out to me – anemias and
myelofibrosis
11. Bile Eschulin and 6.5% NaCL pos– distinguishes Enterococcus species from the group D strep
12. Strep pneumo hemolysis- Alpha
13. Picture of strep pneumo in respiratory found here (http://textbookofbacteriology.net/S.pneumoniae.html)
14. ALP seen in—- Liver and Bone
15. Someone comes in after 4hours of MI symptoms gave results of CK CKMB and troponin- I picked
troponin it was most elevated.
16. PT elevated in—Gave various factors I choose VII
17. Intrinsic has which factor- I picked Von Wilebrand(VIII)
18. Enterobacteria broad question- can’t remember the question but I chose Ferments Lactose
19. Someone who expresses immunity and acquired Hep B will have- HbsAg
20. Blood EDTA given to the lab 6hrs after draw will most effect– I chose platelets
21. What tube quantitates the determination of Calcium- Sodium heparin? (Red/Gold was not avail)
22. Electrophoresis question
23. Description of immature cell no picture
24. Differentiation by description no picture of myelocyte and promyelocyte
25. When using a blutterfly for coag study – Discard a blue top then use 2nd blue
26. Description of Football shaped egg with hyaline plugs at each end- Trich Trich
27. 4 nuclei may have chromatoidal bars large, round glycogen vacuole.- E. Histolytica
28. Hypersegmented neutrophils seen in vitamin B12 or folate deficiencies
29. Picture of Triple phos in urine
30. ALP elevation seen in- Hepatic Carcinoma?
31. Colon tumor marker- CEA
32. trough level is the lowest concentration in the patient’s bloodstream, therefore, the specimen should be
collected just prior to administration of the drug.
33. Peak Levels drawn 2-3hrs after drug is given
34. bacitracin test can also be used to differentiate the bacitracin-resistant Staphylococcus from the
bacitracin-susceptible Micrococcus.
35. Increased bili in urine will appear- Dark yellow color
36. WBC casts seen in pyelonephritis (kidney infection)
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37. Waxy Cast- a higher refractive index
38. Metabolic acidosis- Vomiting
1. Role of a supervisor
A. Democratic
B. Autocratic
C. Laissez-faire
2. Colony stimulated factor is composed of?
3. Picture of histoplasma capsulatum
4. Hodgkins cell- I guessed reed stern berg
5. Giant platelets- since there was no Bernard, I chose the may hagglin.
6. What it means to have a high plt count-essential thrombocytopenia
7. Procainamide-NAPA
8. A histogram ?
9. What does it mean if the organism is resistant? (This is the sensitivity)
A. Too little agar
B. Too much organism in the innoculum.
10. Basket cells/smudge cells. Where do you see them in?
11. Low serum ferritin, high tibc, low iron. What disorder?
12. Picture of a tube that had white organism inside. (Thought ithat was the Kansasii one but I was most
likely wrong)
13. ABO discrepancies
14. Oligoclonal band-multiple sclerosis
15. Electrophoresis
16. Something about a chromosome. So I assumed t15:17
17. Rotavirus. If the EIA is positive, what do you do next?
18. picture of a cell
A. Dohle bodies
B. Auer rods
19. A graph with something on the left ( I forgot) and on the bottom is time. The question is about enzyme.
A. Enzyme concentration
B. Substrate concentration
20. Another graph with plt, wbc, rbc. 3 different graphs but the question was about the WBC.
21. A/A niacin postive
22. Ionized cal was left to stand for a while. What would happen?
A. Change in pH
B. Evaporation
23. A line graph of glucose and time. Which line would be a normal glucose level.
24. Hepatobilliary test
A. Ast and ALT
B. GGT
25. What enzyme would go up first in myocardial infarction.
A. CK
B. Myoglobin
26. Picture of agglutinated blood. How to disperse the cells.
A. 22% albumin
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B. Saline
C. Prewarm
27. Another colony stimulated factor question
28. Anti-Hcv positive, Anti-Hbs positive
A. Hep A
B. Hep B
C. Hep C
D. Hep D
After ingesting moth balls what you see in PBS? Heinz Bodies
AB Rh: POSITIVE patient has reaction on forward A 4+ and B 1+ Rh 4+. What will you report? I answered
AB Rh +
Gram negative cocci after a jaw surgey? Veilonella spp
QC on BhCG has weak positive in QC + and negative on QC neg what will you release? Release as positive
BhCG.
MCV day 1: 78, MCV day 2: 77 MCV day 3: 76 MCV day 4: 62, what is the probable reason? Wrong
patient.
Which leukemia + for Philadelphia?
High LAP score?
Low LAP score?
Smudge cells usually seen in? ALL
A picture of alternaria fungus.
A picture of Candida geothricum.
Olive oil for. M.furfur
calculate precision.
Youre given a list of cv, which of them is best?
Given lab results, which one is suggestive of Lactic acidosis?
Calculate how many units of blood to be taken given the antibodies and their percentages.
Calculate corrected WBC given the retics and WBC count. In this case the differential was only 50. Im not
sure but what i did is: WBC Uncorrected x 50 / nucleated RBC x 50. I did the 100 the answere is not on d
choices, but when i calculated using 50 as factor, the answer was on the choices.
Study antibodies of HAV.
RPR negative FTABS +? Release positive.
Cryoprecipitate and FFP allowable time of use if Ref. temp is 4 degree celcius. Based on AABB standard.
CK MB normal, Tn I is high? Myocardial infarct.
First to increase in MI? Myoglobin.
Study electrophoresis: Albumin, alpha 1, alpha2, beta, globulin.. Which is high given the disease, or the
other way around.
There was a fungal colony which is violet to purple in color on the plate. Im not sure, i chose Fusarium.
Biochemicals of Salmonella typhimurium and Kleb. oxytoca
I had one simple BB panel. it was positive for Anti-Fya and anti-E.
Majority of lymphocytes. T Cells
Premature new born was transfused? why? I answered to compensate to the loss blood becoz of frequent
phlebotomy. Not sure though..
Pheochromocytoma : Metanephrines
coccaine metabolite? Benzoylecgonine..
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1. Transudates are a. purulent b. has many bacteria c. usually noninflammatory
2. All about DAT and ABO discrepancies. I recommend you study all the discrepancies the cause and
solutions of each
3. difference between p. aeruginosa and p. putida – growth at 42’C
4. S. epidermidis in catheterized patients
5. Microccus
6. Pictures of ANA patterns and dse association
7. Picture of Curvularia
8. Geotrichum candidum
9. Levey-Jennings chart
10. Random and systematic error
11. aggregating substances
12. picture of poikilocytes
13. Hbnopathy assoc w naphthalene poisoning
14. Blood pictures and ds associations
15.electrophoresis question.
16.CPDA-1 expiry date
17. coagulation pathways and dse correlations
18. metabolic acidosis
19. pappenheimer bodies
20. CLL, leukemoid reaction
21. Mixing studies
22. graph abt asp, collagen, epinephrine
23. Donor deferrals
24 Hepatitis markers
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Lots of diagrams with iron, ferritin, TIBC, bilirubin, urobilinogen and then asked what type of disease?
KNOW IMVIC reactions: I have had 2 /3 question from there
K. pneumoniae vs K. Oxi….(See i don’t svn remember the whole name) (As soon as I saw it, I knew indole
pos)
How would you differentiate diid Yersinia species: chose motility
know the X factor and V factor H. influenza and how it correlates with S. Aureus.
sensitivity for all the gram (+) organisms ( asked bat Bacitracin, positive camp test,)
Lots of ANA questions(remember the numbers and the patterns)
You received a nasopharyngal swab specimen for ROTAVIRUS, what to do? (I choose call for clarification
of the request)
Blood from newborn had high PT, high PTT and TT, bleeding from cord also…reason…is a)
afibriginogemia b) lupus inhibitor c) factor 8 deficiency d) factor 10 deficiency
FFP is thawed at 8am when is the expiration? Choices: 8pm, 8am etc..
Question about what antibody causes HDFN when dad was O neg rr, and mom is A pos, R1R1…choices
were antibody…. D, c, A, or B
Every other parameter on CBC was ok, (MCV, RDW, RBC, PLT, WBC)..delta failure on HGH is due to
what…instrument malfunction, tourniquet too tight, wrong blood was tested….
Lactic acid specimen has to handled how…..a) chilled and separated from cells b) heated c) room temp
incubation d) request EDTA sample only
LDL computation
Picture of Western Blot for HIV, read and interpret the results
Series of results of HGB results for 5 consecutive days, results in Day 3 is high, the others are almost the
same. What is the reason? Choices: machine malfunction, collected too early, specimen left standing too
long..
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S. aureus ferments what? choices: mannitol, sucrose, lactose, fructose
Protein electrophoresis in pH 8.6 what is close to cathode? Choices: albumin & alpha 1, gamma & beta,
albumin & alpha 2..
A 70 year old man will donate, what will be the grounds of deferral given the following screening tests: BP
140/90, Pulse 70, Temp 37 degrees the other choice is HBG of 120 or 125 I forget..
Donor will donate plasma. What will be the reason for deferring the donor; choices: Donor received
penicillin(I think?) for last week, confirmed Hep B infection last year I forget the other choices..
Pt and ptt controls were abnormal qc repeated ptt was normal what will you do? – replace thromboplastin or
replace activator
What process will you do for Weak D? choices: DAT, IAT, elution/adsorbtion etc..
Choriocarcinoma
Graph of lag phase micro what are the IgG and IgM?
A result of CBC: increase WBC, the rest are normal. Platelets is 20. What is the blood picture? (choices
ranged from the normal or abnormal status of the ff PT, PTT, Fibrinogen, D-Dimer)
2mL of blood was filled only for a 5 mL of anticoagulant tube; what would happen for results of apt?
(decreased? Increased? Normal?)
O positive man had a strong anti-e, he will be incompatible with what percent of what blood Rh type?
(choices; it’s something like: 97% of O positive? 25% of A positive? I forgot the others)
If the PT controls were okay and the aptt controls were okay, what do you do next? Choices were replace
thrombin, replace activator, etc.
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What is the cv is the 80-100 mmol/L is within 2SDs (choices: 5.5% , 10%, 20%)
What is the purpose of Protein C and S? (choices: act as natural anticoagulant, activates protein coagulants..
etc..)
What bacteria will show positive and negative for the following. Bile esculin, 6.5na, Camp, bacitracin.
(choices: S. pyogenes, S. agalactiae, Viridians, Enterococcus)
Slight agglutination only on RPR test. What to do next? (choices: Repost as positive, re-calibrate and re-test,
replaced new lot number, repeat testing using same kit)
What’s wrong with this stain? blood smear shows pink buff on rbcs (choices: acid alcohol is too strong,
carbolfuchsin is used instead of safranin etc.. I forgot the other choices)
Know common markers for B and T lymphs (CD 19, 20/ CD 2,3,5,7, 4/8 mature
How do you differentiate Yersinia enterocolitica vs Yersinia pestis? (I choose motility but not sure)
What is the specific gravity of the 3mL urine diluted with 3mL H2O? Specific gravity is 1.024 before
dilution. (choices: 1.024, 1.072, 1.048 etc..)
How do you know if the plasma used for PT has been contaminated with heparin? (choices: test for PT,
perform mixing studies.. etc.. I forgot the other choices)
Memorize mnemonics for IMVICs, TSIs, H2S producers, Oxidase and Urease producing bacteria and others
etc.
Where does ALP is increased? (I choose the associated with bone disease; no Obj. Jaundice in the choices)
Bernard Soulier syndrome – The question is long but the main differentiation that caught my eye is “giant
platelets”. The rest of the choices are not in sync with the question. (No May-Hegglin in the choices so I
choose Bernard S.)
What does 5HIAA in urine mean? (choices: renal disease, carcinoid tumors etc..)
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Given: HDL was 34, Trig was 400, and cholesterol was 235. LDL was directly tested and was 169. What to
do next? (choices: repeat Trigly and recalculate LDL?, repeat Chole and recalculated LDL? Recollect after
12 hours of fasting Etc.. I forgot the other choices)
A control blood smear was made that covered 60% of the slide. The red cells stained pink while white cells
had their nuclei stain dark blue to light blue. The white cells were clustered at the tail end.
A) Accept
B) Reject – white cells clustered at tail
C) Reject – Red cell color is incorrect
Ran controls and PT was normal, PTT was abnormal. Replaced controls and got same results. What should
you do next?
A) Change out the Recombiplastin
B) Change out the CaCl
C) Rerun controls
D) Run patient tests
Chemistry/Urinalysis
Transudates
Abnormal urine colors
Cast dealing with strenuous exercise
Difference between traumatic tap; hemorrhage
The difference between primary and secondary thyroidism —TSH
Know your enzymes –ALP AST, LD, etc [Wordsology’s high yield chemistry chart]
Know your Tumor markers –what cancer is associated with it. I got one with hCG—testicular cancer –
[Wordsology’s high yield chemistry chart]
Dilution question
Blood Gasses: Metabolic Acidosis/Respiratory Alkalosis etc. [know reference ranges; clinical conditions]
Procainamide and NAPA
Immunology
DiGeorge Syndrome- Regarding T-Cell deficiency—Absence of Thymus
CD4: is it a) inducer b) phagocytic c) cytotoxic d) don’t remember the other choice
ANA patterns
Hematology
Picture of a peripheral blood smear with Plasmodium falciparum
Howell Jolly inclusion picture –what is it composed of? DNA-
One with Pappenheimer Bodies – what do you stain it with? –Confirm with Prussian Blue
Know what anemias are considered normochromic normocytic
Hemoglobin C disease—Target cells
Picture of a peripheral blood smear with Plasmodium falciparum
COAGULATION
APTT; PT – Disseminated intravascular coagulation—Correlating the APTT: PT FIBRINOGEN results
[prolonged or not]
Know what factors are in the Intrinsic and Extrinsic Pathway, mixing studies
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Blood Bank:
Felt like I had a lot of blood bank questions (my weakest subject) Know how to do panels, DAT/ELUTION/
Subgroups of A
Criteria for Allogenic Donor Selection
CDPA-1 know its advantage
Microbiology/Mycology
Wordsology’s Gram Positive Cocci Chart! Had a question deal with +/- controls for Bile Esculin; CAMP;
NACL; Bacitracin
picture of Kansassi
Sterilization – 15 lbs –121C
ESBL
TSI reactions for Enterobacteriaceae –Bottom Line Approach Yellow & Purple book
Ziehl-Neilson—hot stain
Rotavirus – stool
Histoplasma capsulatum –tuberculate macroconidia
Sporothrix schenckii—Cigar bodies
Laboratory management:
One question about quality assurance
1) amniotic fluid cannot be tested for bilirubin on regular chemistry analyzer as serum bilirubin because???
A) they are demanding, B) they are biochemically different, or C) it is just too turbid. I guessed B (not sure
if correct).
2)picture of Aued rod
3) picture of sideroblasts.
4) iron deficiency anemia question.
5) I had many electrophoresis questions…HGB C disease picture.
6) Many panels, including enzyme panels, RT, 37 degree reactions,
7) lectins are used in blood bank to…a) find an antigen on rbc b) enhance reactions. there were 2 more
choices.
8) blood from newborn had high PT, high PTT and TT, bleeding from cord also…reason…is a)
afibriginogemia b) lupus inhibitor c) factor 8 deficiency d) factor 10 deficiency…..I guessed A (not sure if
correct)
9) long slender gram neg rods from plueral fluid..tapered ends and long…I chose bacteriodes fragelis (not
sure if correct)
10) how would you differentiate morganella and providencia.
11) question about TIBC low, serum iron low…I chose anemia due to chronic inflammation (not sure if
correct)
12) question about a discrepancy (subgroup of A) another one about patient had emergency transfusion in
past..front type had mixed field reactions.
13) unusual band between gama and beta band on serum electrophoresis is due to what….
14) Spike in gamma region on serum electrophereisis is due to what…
15) If plts are pooled just before transfusion in room temp in open system…when do they expire
16)type I hypersensitivity reactions are due to ….
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17) patient is diagnosed with hepatitis B 5 months ago…only thing positive is anti-HBc..what will the med
tech do….a) report it as is..b) repeat the negative HBsAG c) report the anti-HBc as false positive d) suggest
HCV testing.
18) Donor had anti-Lea, what is the best product for the blood inventory…a) rbc 2) FFP..there were 2 more
choices.
19) Myelofibrosis picture.
20) enzymes tests that are needed for muscle dystrophy.
21) ANA detects what…
22) what is chloride shift?
23) what disorder leads to hypertension…when Na is high and K is low…
24)teacher was exposed to Rubella 5 days ago…but she had IgG in her serum…was she immune ?
25) Gram neg coccobacilli grows on chocklate agar and grows around staph aureus colonies on SBA as
satellites…does it need a) X and V factor b) X only c) V only d) doesnot need either.
26) presumptive id of Neisseria gonorrhea had be made when it is seen in a) male urethral discharge b)
female urine…. there were 2 more choices….
27) question about what method is it when light is emitted and expanded and transmitted at different
wavelength..
28)something about mycobacteria…and Kinyoun Stain….
29) wright stain was too pink..what would you do…increase ph…decrease ph…add more wright stain..
30) cat bite wound culture grew gram neg…the choices were pastuerlla multocida, toxoplasma and 2 other..
31) question about what antibody causes HDFN when dad was O neg rr, and mom is A pos, R1R1…choices
were antibody…. D, c, A, or B
32) High PT reason…very easy…factor 7
33) every other parameter on CBC was ok, (MCV, RDW, RBC, PLT, WBC)..delta failure on HGH is due to
what…instrument malfunction, tourniquet too tight, wrong blood was tested….
34) for OGTT pregnant woman had a FPG of 250 mg/dl…what would you the best thing to do…a) consult
physician before proceeding b) redraw and retest c) report it d) give oral glucose dose any way…
35) antigen frequencies were given… how many units would you screen…
36) anion gap values were given…calculate anion gap and choose an answer that explains instrument
malfunction.
37) eluate had sc one pos, SC two pos, SC theree negative…..you would do what…a) repeat eluate b) do a
panel on eluate c) do an autoabsorption d) do neautraliazation
38) A pos man had no platelet increase after 8 units RH negative were transfused…a) irradiate a unit b)
HLA matched unit c) RH pos platelets only d) ABO compatible only.
39) lactic acid specimen has to handled how…..a) chilled and separated from cells b) heated c) room temp
incubation d) request EDTA sample only .
40) If urine had many RBC and yeast…how would you add in the urine to differentiate rbc from yeast…a)
glacial acetic acid b) saline c) acetic acid…not sure what I chose or what is correct…
Stomatocytes:liver disease
• Lewis Antibody – if Le and Se gene is inherited, one has Leb adsorbed unto RBC Le (a-b+)
• Result of lipase increased at Normal amylase (given reference value) saan daw associated ?
Blood Bank:
-Discrepancies, study them. A useful mnemonic device I used for ABO discrepancies was “EMMMA”:
Extra antigen
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Missing antigen
Mixed field
Missign antibody
Additional antibody
Chem: I literally only had recall questions from here. A mnemonic I used was U C B U “yoU C(see)
Bulls**t”
U- unconjugated billirubin: Elevated in pre hepatic and post hepatic or billary obstruction
C- conjugated billirubin: elevated in hepatic and post hepatic
B- billirubin: elevated in hepatic and post hepatic
U- urobillinogen: Elevated in pre-hep and hepatic. Decreased in billiary obstruction
Heme: Know your PT APTT ranges and MIXING STUDIES! and lupus anticoagulant.
Immunology: I had alot of HIV, just know that Wetern Blot is used for confirmation.
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CA 19 9
Metabolite of PHENOBARBITAL
PROCAINAMIDE
SLEEP APNEA- Associated with pseudocholinesterase
Flurometer
Valinomycin- K
Cut off absorbance for HBEAG was 0.734 something. Specimen was 0.3. Interpret result (Positive,
Indetermine, Negative)
Stomatocytes associated with? (Burr cells)
Values of Cl, Na, Co2 and asked which one is not valid based on anion gap
Catalase pos G+ cocci from (dubircle??) ulcer , slide coag neg, 6.5% NaCl Pos, Bile Neg,
ID as S. bovis, consider normal flora, assume S. aureus and perform tube coag (can’t remember 4th choice)
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precipitate other compound with negative inference
ppt other compounds with positive interference
increase reaction with unconjugated bili
Pt 5 day differential result with Hgb slowly dropping, cause of result change (MCV went from 93-92 in 4
days to 72 on 5th day)?
Developing iron def
interference due to lipemic sample
Sample from wrong pt
Calculate # of units needed to obtain 4 units that are K and E negative (frequencies were provided)
1. Picture of Fusobacterium
2. A thin, gram-negative bacillus with tapered ends isolated from an empyema specimen grew only on
anaerobic sheep blood agar. It was found to be indole positive, lipase negative, and was inhibited by 20%
bile. The most probable identification of this isolate would be:
a. Bacteroides
b. Fusobacterium
c. Clostridium
d. Porphyromonas
3. Picture of Taenia proglottid
a. Taenia saginata
b. Taenia solium
c, Dypilidium Caninum
4. Plate of Auer rods, where do you see them
a. AML
b. CML
5. A beta-hemolytic, catalasa positive, gram-positive coccus is coagulase negative by the slide coagulase
test. Which of the following es the most appropriate in identification of this organism?
a. Report a coagulase-negative Staphylococcus
b. Report a coagulase-negative Staphylococcus aureus
c. Reconfirm the hemolytic reaction on a fresh 24-hour culture
d. Do a tube coagulase test to confirm the slide test
6. Hairy Cell plate, the picture looked blurry
a. atypic linfocite
b. hairy cell leukimia
c. normal linfocite
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7. Plate of toxic granulation
8. During the past month, Staphylococcus epidermidis has been isolated from blood cultures at 2-3 times the
rate from the previous year. The most logical explanation for the increase in these isolates is that:
a. The blood culture media are contaminated with this organism
b. The hospital ventilation system is contaminated with Staphylococcus epidermidis
c. There has been a break in proper skin preparation before drawing blood for culture
d. A relatively virulent isolate is being spread from patient to patient
9. Which test differentiates E coli O157:H7
a. Manitol
b. Sorbitol
c. Lactosa
10. A clean catch urine sample was taken:
TSI: acid slant/acid butt; no H2S gas produced
Indole: positive
Motility: positive
Citrate: negative
Lysine decarboxylase: positive
Urea: negative
VP: negative
This organism most likely is:
a. Klebsiella pneumoniae
b. Shigella dysenteriae
c. Escherichia coli
d. Enterobacteria cloacae
11. A gram-negative bacillus has been isolated from feces, and the confirmed biochemical reaction fit those
of Shigella. The organism does not agglutinate in Shigella antisera. What should be done next?
a. Test the organism with a new lot of antisera
b. Rest with Vi antigen
c. Repeat the biochemical test
d. Boil the organism and retest with the antisera
12. Asacarolitic organism, DNasa + Oxidasa +- Moraxella catarrhalis
13. Propionibacterium acnés – Blood culture contamination
14. The reverse CAMP test, lecithinase production, double zone hemolysis, and Gram stain morphology are
all useful criteria in the identification of:
a. Clostridium perfringens
b. Streptococcus agalactiae
c. Propionibacterium acnes
d. Bacillus anthracis
15. CNA and PEA
16. Case: From a pleural liquid it was recoverd a vancomycin, clindamycin (I think and another antibiotic,
can’t remember) susceptible. On sheep blood agar was chewy or sticky and in McK it was pink, they
concluded that it was Klebsiella, what do you do next?
a. Report Klebsiella
b. It’s not a common site for klebsiella to grow
c. The plates does not match klebsiella
17. A patient with Meningococci in peniciline treatment. A Gram was made and there where Gram- cocci. It
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was cultured and at 48 hours there where no organism. What happened?
a. The diagnostic was erroneous
b. Antibiotic inhibit the bacteria
c. Patient created antibodies against the bacteria
d. Bacteria produced Betalactamasa
18. when you prepare sheep blood agar, what do you do next?
19. Urine for culture and routine completely spilled- obtain a new sample
20. add KOH and a fishy odor comes out- clue cells
21. Parasite that migrates to lungs- Ascaris lumbricoides
22. A 47 year old was in antibiotic treatment. She had diarrhea for 4 consecutive days, what should you do
next?
23. Mycobacterium process
24. Stool sample question
25. 57% Hematocrit is normal in:
a. Male
b. Female
c. One year old
d. New born
26. Siderotic granules: prussian blue
27. transudate
a. Contains bacterias
b. Something about natural cells
c. Inflamation
28. An alkaline urine refrigerated becomes turbid because of:
a. Amorphous urates
b. Wbc
c. Amoruphous phosphates
d. Bacteria
29. Cristales in sinovial fluid
a. Gota
b. Pseudogota
30. Negative strip, clinitest +
a. Glycosuria
b. Juvenile diabetes
31. Urinalisis and everything was ok except ketones 3+
a. Acetest
b. Ictotest
32. Mean of 140 with 2s and falls in 95% what is the range?
33. 4g of NaCl is added to water until 2500ml is reached. What is the concentration? 4/2500=.16%
34. Absorbance=(abs unk/abs std)x [std]
35. Elevated ALT
36. The best diagnostic for an alcoholic
a. AST
b. ALT
c. GGT
37. In which of the following conditions would a normal level of creatine kinase be found?
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a. acute myocardial infarct
b. hepatitis
c. early muscular dystrophy
38. Elevated ALP
a. biliary obstruction
b. hepatitis
39. what should you evaluate in a antacid overload?
40. If the creamy layer of a red tube is discarded and chemistry is done, which result may be affected?
41. cases of acidosis and alkalosis
42. IDA common case
43. Icteric sample
44. A BUN- Creatinine case
45. Histogram, they presented WBC, RBC y platelets. What is the cause of interference in the WBC
a. NRBC-
b. Retics
c. platelet clott
46. Breast cancer marker- CA 15-3
47. Antibodies against TSH
a. Carcinoma-
b. Graves
c. Hashimoto
48. What should you do to a pregnant woman that in the 2hpp had 500mg of glucose in fasting
a. Give glucola
b. Do another fast blood
c. Change to 5 hpp
49. If a particle has the same isolectric point as the pH
a. It moves slowly
b. It moves faster
c. doesn’t move at all
50. Control fall out 3 standard deviations, which rule is broken?
51 Why ANA test is good?
a. Array immuno disease
b. Diagnose of SLE
c. Descartes Sjorgrens
52. Patient with anti-HCV + y anti-HBs +, what does he have?
a. Hep A
b. Hep B
c. Hep C
d. Hep D
53. ELISA was HIV +, What should you do next?
a. Report to the dr HIV +
b. Repeat ELISA with original sample
c. Obtain a new sample
54. Case of a patient that had everything elevated and platelets super high, RBC, Hct
a. Polycythemia vera
b. Polycythemia vera absolute
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c. other types of PV that can’t remember
55. Bands of IgG to what their associate?
56. Howell Jolly plate
57. NRBC exercise
58. A plate of a lot of platelets, what do you do?
a. Repeat in the machine
b. Ask for a new sample and process it in the machine
c. Dilute and do a manual count
59. What is RDW
60. 2ml of blood is collected in a .5ml citrate tube, how is affected the pt
a. Decreases because of the inadequate ratio
b. Increases because of the inadequate ratio
c. Normal
61. Aspirin affects?
62. Why RBC in saline are better than those in CPDA-1?
a. Less glucose
b. More donor plasma
63. Girl with menorrhagia and elevated ptt
a. DD
b. Afibrinolemia
c. Ristocetin
64. Mother with mf agglutination
a. do kleihauer to mother’s cell
b. do kleihauer to baby cell
65. Who is the best donor?
a. Patient that received a transfusion 8 months ago
b. Woman that gave birth 4 weeks ago
c. Man that donate blood 10 weeks ago
d. Patient with Hgb in 12
66. To prevent Graft vs Host
Para evitar Host vs Graft que le das
a. Irradiated
b. Leukocyte reduce
67. Temperature for thawing FFP
68. Patient in operating room, intraoperative blood
a. Transfuse the patient in24 hrs if it was maintain at 1-6C
b. Do a crossmatch and then transfuse
c. can give to other patients
69. Lectin use
70. Blood bank panels
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hepatic results.
1)what causes postprandial lipemia
2)for some measurement (can’t remember exactly) the absorbance cutoff is0.700 and the measured viral
antigen is 0.300 what does this mean? +/- or undetermined results.
3)patient fasting glucose is 128 and 2hr level is 200something.What should be done? Repeat test, do glucose
tolerance… can’t remember other choices.
4) Cushing syndrome ACTH and Cortisol levels
5)Monocytosis seen in what? TB, mononucleosis, hypersensitivity.
6) young woman with sore throat, malaise and cervical lymphadenopathy then given antigen or antibody
levels to CMV and EBV and had to determine if it is coinfection, CMV or EBV.
7) One ANA question with fluorescing speckled and centromere patter and I think it was CREST and
scleroderma.
8) patient prostate gland was remove a year ago due to cancer, yet his current PSA is positive? Is the test not
specific, is the sample not his, his cancer came back
Heme/ coag
1)There is a picture that I came across in two different questions and I think it was hemagglutinin
2)Reduced EPO is due to what? PV or secondary PV
3)Philadelphia chromosome
4)Megakaryocyte CD marker
5)lupus anti coag what does it do
6)recognize DIC lab results
7)Manual RBC calculation
8)MI patient who was treated with streptokinase. Which of the results sugesst that treatment wasn’t
successful. PT 12, PT 25,PTT 200 or D-dimer +
Where are urine crystals formed? Options 1)where distaled tubules, proximal tubules, loop of henle or
bladder.
2) 2 questions about someone who had Duffy antibody but no longer has it. They need blood what do you
do? Options where cross match only or do pannel are the ones I remember.
3) which is used as control in micro? It was something for ecloi vs something else for indole test. options for
urease, lysine?
4) question about adh in chemistry and water
5) questions about sodium and chloride
6) question about Mcv
7) coefficient of variation formula
8) what is Tsh used for? Some of the options were to detect thyroid cancer, something about t4
9) where is lymphocyte from? Not bone marrow but another one I forgot but bone marrow was option.
10) something about Sudan stain and what’s it used for? Options were lipids, fats, proteins and something
else
I had a lot of micro and blood bank questions more than anything else.
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17. Catalase pos bacilli in blood culture. Non beta hemolytic, non motile, Penicillin resistant
18. TSI and some biochemical results and what is the organism?
19. Pasturella- cat bite
20. Blastoconidia
21. Legionella test
22. GN anaerobe in blood culture
23. Calculate transferrin saturation
24. Hepatitis marker
25. HTLV confirmation test
26. Which blood group antigen is not stable in storage?
27. What is in the saliva of a Le(a+b-) individual?
28. PCR erroneous results?
29. What causes postprandial lipemia?
30. Treponemal test
31. High Hct in coag sample. What should you do?
32. What does CO2 electrode measure?
33. BGA pH controls
34. serum Na while other electrolytes are normal. What should you do next?
35. Pic of stomatocytes
36. Enterococcus vs Group D strep
37. Aeromonas is oxidase pos
38. 1 panel but it asked about the characteristics of the antibody and not just antibody ID
39. Cushing- hyperglycemia
40. 1 mycology
41. Mycoplasma has no cell wall so penicillin is not effective
42. Monitor PA and NAPA
43. What affects HgbA1c?
44. What can cause a in ESR?
45. False positive in UA reagent strips
1(Picture of S. haematobium)
From which source are you most likely to see this parasite?
A.Urine
B.Feces
C.Blood
D.Sputum
2 This catalase positive, gram positive bacilli with diptheroid morphology is highly resistant to many
antibiotics and is associated with immunocompromised patients.
A.)C. diptheriae
B.)C. jeikeium
C.)L. monocytogenes
D.)E. rhusiopthiae
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3 A chart with susceptibilities (of which I can’t remember) for K pneumoniae asking how the results should
be reported. I’m pretty sure it was an ESBL producing organism according to the results.
7. A flat colony with green metallic sheen grows on blood. What’s the likely TSI reaction?
(A picture with 4 different tubes)
1. A/A
2.K/A
3.K/K
4.K/A +gas +H2S
9.Most likely species for: Small gray colonies that are gamma hemolytic, bile esculin positive, PYR
negative, Gram positive cocci in short chains and small clusters
A. Group A
B. Group B
C. Enterococcus
D. Strep bovis
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B Oxidase
C Novobiocin
13 (Picture of Epidermophyton)
Which species is this organism most likely to be?
1.only 1 bottle for blood culture was sent to the lab from a baby,what would you do next?
A.gram stain
B.subculture
C.recollect
D.plate in an agar
2.what is the purpose of lectins?
3.8 yr old in er had a alkaline dark brown urine,what do you expect to see in his urine?
A.glitter cells and hyaline cast
B.waxy cast and granular cast
C.red cells and red cells
D.white cells and white cells
4.what is decrease in females who have their menstrual period?
A.transferrin
B.alt
C.haptoglobin
D.ggt
5.what is chloride shift?
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The most common cause of sperm agglutination is presence of sperm antibodies
Swarming; indole negative (proteus mirabilis)
Swarming; indole positive (proteus vulgaris)
Picture of rouleaux; the cause of this can be prom the proliferation of (plasma cells-multiplemyeloma)
Picture of csf electrophoresis; what would the tech do next
Fresh frozen plasma was thawed at 10am and then stored at 4C to be picked up at 3, what should the tech do
2mL of blood and .5 mL ofanticoagulant; what would happen for results of apt
Agar was poured into a 100 mL container instead of the normal 150 mL container. What would happen?
LDL calculation
hCg can be detected in
hemophilia B is a deficiency in factor IX
cell lysis in the classical pathway is caused by___ (know which numbers ex: C8, C5 etc.)
urine was delayed in being refrigerated, what happens; increased pH increased amorphous, casts dissolve
cause of cloudy CSF- crystals
calculate anion gap
calculate LDL
know what the different malarlia looks like in a blood smear
antibody panels
O positive man had a strong anti-e, he will be incompatible with what percent of what blood Rh type
Forward type as A, reverse type as AB; what is the cause
Mom is A dad is O; gave results of baby which ended up being A pos with a positive DAT and a
hemoglobin of 8.1. Which one gave a misleading result? I put DAT
If the PT controls were okay and the aptt controls were okay, what do you do next? Choices were replace
thrombin, replace activator, etc.
What is used to differentiate primary from secondary hypothyroidism; choices were T3, free T4, TSH, and
TBH or something along those lines
Abnormal cells in the bone marrow with a high nucleus to chromatin ratio with few present nucleoli; choices
were atypical lymphocytes, monoblasts, lymphoblasts
Pinworm-use the tape prep
Replace fibrinogen in a patient using what product
Mixed field reactions are caused by having; two cellpopulations
Histogram principle
Calcium-ion elective electrode principle
Normal iron and TIBC; pernicious anemia
Significant titer is; 4 fold between acute and convalescent
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picture of blastomyces
difference between pseudo aer and pseudo putida
Which bacteria is LF , A/A and indole positive ( i put kleb oxytoca )
two questions about CRYO, storage temperature/ time and what needs to be cross matched
Mother is Apos baby is O neg , positive DAT what is the cause ( I put Kell antibodies made by mother ,
another option was baby made antibodies against mother)
R1R1 mother, R1r father, what genotypes are impossible
person donates blood on jan 1st 2016, glycerol solution is added on jan fifth and frozen , what is exp date
( jan 1st 2017, jan 5th 2017, jan 1st 2026, jan 5th 2026)
Know what happens to salt glucose and potassium when ADH is increased
Hepatitis markers
Syphilis markers for someone in the tertiary phase
2)Alkali (that was the exact word )what happens co2, co3, ph?
7)First titer till 120 , second till 50, what is it ? Pnh, mycoplasma …? Something in that nature
10)Aldosterone ?
12)Viewing crystals or urine under microscope , use 10x or 40 more light, less light . Something like that?
13)All analytes were out of wack, due to water not correct for Chem or reagents , something like that?
14)Mother donating rbc to son , what do you do… Wash, irradiate ect…
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Which of the following will 1st to increase after MI?
LD
CK-MB
Myoglobin
Trop I
What RBC inclusion can be seen on blood smear of a child who accidentally ingested moth balls?
Heinz bodies
Pappenheimers
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Calcium
Potassium
Which of the following condition is the most common cause of increase anion gap?
Metabolic alkalosis
Respiratory alkalosis
Metabolic acidosis
Respiratory acidosis
1.What bacteria will show positive and negative for the following. Bile esculin, 6.5na, Camp, bacitracin. I
choose s.pyogenes, S. Agalactia, enterococcus . Other option has s. Virdian, S. Aureus…
2. I will bacteria when exposed to light change color m kansasii
3. Contained tap water m.gonada
4. Anti body panel that had anti k. How would the panel show specific or sensitivity can’t remember. I
choose run enzyme panel not sure is that correct.
5. Had to calculate LDL
6. A questions which had odd results for glucose, sodium, BUN. What would be affected osmolslity 2na +
glucose/20+bun/3
7. Double zone bacteria how to confirmation positive reverse CAMP test.
8. Gram negative anaerobes jaw surgery veillonella
9. A panel that ha anti d and p1
10. Waxy cast or fatty cast I think dye suban o oil.
11. Aeromonas gran negative, beta hemolytic, oxidase positive
12. N meningitis OPNG negative
13. Picture of histoplasma, and one about fluid being drained from the lungs.
14. Picture of aspergillus
15. Zygomycota sporengium
16. Malasezzis furfural- oil or olive oil
17. Auto infection strangyloides
18. Chromogenic agar I think. It was a picture of a agar one side clear organism had different color sheep
blood agar all agate looks the same
19. K ISE- valinomycin
20. Person overdose on salicylate decrease ph- I choose metabolic acidosis
21. ALP ph 9.6- pagets
22. Cocaine metabolite- benzoylecgonine
23. Group A pod mother had and miss carriage d neg, weak d beg… Is the patient a candidate for rhig
24. I have to calculate diagnose for rhig twice. Whole blood divide by 30. Rbc by 15
25. Hba1c affected by hemolytic anemia
26. Caffein for diazo rxn why?
27. Bilirubin- 450nm
28. Pituitary gland – increased TSH and T4
29. Increase bilirubin and urobilinogen
30. Release heparin/ histamine – basophils and mast cells
31. Cryo store at RT from 2pm pt scheduled to be transfused at 3pm what would you do?
32. Irradiated blood for pt receiving blood from mother
33. Positive RPR negative FTA for syphilis -false positive
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34. Pictur of a waxy cast
35. Alpha thalassemia-hgb Bart and Hgb h
36. Eosinophils in Urine/ intestinal nephritis
37. know the difference CML and AML
38. Questions about multiple myeloma
39. Increase platelet and wbc
40. Issoagglutinin of Type O- anti A, anti B, anti AB
41. Beta and gamma bridge
42. HTLV- confirmatory test- western blot
Blood Bank
– make sure you know the antibody panel and how to identify the clinical significant ones I got about 2
panels. Use the one shown here in wordsology.
– make sure you know how to interpret ABO blood typing. I got a question asking if Anti A is pos and Anit
B neg and A1 cell Pos and B cells Pos. what should the technologist report. Also I got a question asking
what should the technologist do if Anti A is mixed feel and Anti B is Pos and A1 cell Pos how would you
interpret it. Also got tuns of questions about ABO discrepancies. If there is a autoantibody reacting only at
room temperature which would it be. ect
Clinical Chem
I was asked to calculate
– Molarity -creat clearance- osmolarity- anion gap, coefficient of variation, and I had to know the metabolic
syndrome and the conditions that can cause them. LDL calculation as well.
Microbiology
– tons of questions!
know the different in distinguishing K.pnemoniae from K. oxytoca. know about the differential medias.
Thanks to the high yield notes most of the questions surrounded them.
Hematology
know how to calculate MVC, MCHC, Manual differentials or wcb, rbc, and one of platelet was there
too.know the different leukemia CML, ALL and lymphomas and how to distinguish them.
those are my recall in a nut shell. HIGH YIELD NOTES HELPED
BLOOD BANK
1.What antigens are found in the saliva of group A, Le(a+b-) individuals? – Le a (other options included A,
H, Le b in different combos)
2. Given a mini panel of antibody reactions. The serum is tested against Group 0 RBCs and cord cells.
Reacts with all adult cells, no reaction with cord cells. What antibody? – Anti-I
3. Given panel of antibody reactions, have to determine which ones are causing the reaction and choose the
choice that corresponds to them. – In mine, the antibodies were anti-Le a and Le b, but the answer to the
question was ‘Is absorbed from the serum onto red cells.’
4. I had 2 questions with the same picture, a cold agglutinin picture. The first question asked what
disease/infection it was associated with (Mycoplasma pneumoniae) and the second asked what would cause
this blood picture (cold reacting antibodies).
5. Blood comes up positive for HTLV-I/II, what do you do next? – I put repeat the test that was just run. (It
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said which test in the question, I believe it was EIA, so ‘repeat EIA,’ but I’m not 100% sure. Other options
were western blot, etc.)
6. O neg, Rh pos patient now has a positive DAT. What will their typing results look like now? Includes Rh
control. – I chose the answer where everything was negative except the Rh control was positive.
7. Which antibody degrades upon standing, making it hard to detect? – I didn’t know the answer. I think I
chose Lewis. CW was an option and I don’t remember the rest.
8. Lots of discrepancies, either due to ABO or reagents/technique, but all situational. I don’t know how else
to prepare yourself for them other than knowing the basics well and being able to apply them to reason your
way through.
9. Given mother blood type (AB-) and baby type (O+), what do you do next? – Since O blood type is
impossible from AB mom, get a new heelstick from baby. Other options were get a sample from father,
administer RhIg.
10. Mixed field reaction observed. What caused it? – I chose transfusion with O cells.
11. Donor deferral question
IMMUNO
1. ANA pattern, asked what antibody would make that pattern.
2. Patient comes in with mild flu-like symptoms. Given table with IgG and IgM titer values for EBV, CMV
and toxoplasma. Have to determine if primary infection with just one or coinfection of EBV, CMV.
3. Biggest problem with PCR? – I chose contamination with nucleotides.
4. What HBV disease marker is found in individuals with a past infection? – HbcAb
MICRO/MYCOLOGY
1. Aeromonas, based on description of reactions.
2. Patient comes in with lesions on arm, given description of what is seen in culture. – I guessed, but I’m
pretty sure it was Sporothrix schenkii
3. Blastoconidia – definition. Options included definition of arthroconidia.
4. Enterobacter, given description of reactions – can’t remember if the species was cloacae or aerogenes,
both were options. Other options were K. pneumo and oxytoca.
5. Following a throat infection, patient is having kidney problems. What bacteria causing it? – S. pyogenes,
other strep species as other options.
6. Patient has walking pneumoniae and is prescribed penicillin. 2 weeks later, still sick. What happened? –
Bacteria produces a beta lactamase.
7. Make a gram stain of CSF at night, how do you store until culture the next day?
8. Potassium permanganate in auramine-rhodamine stain for Myco. – Quenching agent
9. Specimen of choice for rotavirus? – Stool
10. Took a swab sample from a wound and incubated on three different medias (including anaerobic media).
Nothing grew. What happened? – Swab material inhibited the sample.
11. Latex agglutination for S. aureus – Protein A and clumping factor
12. Given TSI results, what do you report? – The results pointed to Salmonella, so I chose ‘do Salmonella
typing’ but another choice was to call the Dr. and immediately report Salmonella type organism. Others
were, report normal fecal flora and do Shigella typing.
HEMATOLOGY
1. Burr cells blood picture – Uremia
2. Stomatocytes blood picture – Liver disease
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3. Badly discolored blood picture with very spiky cells. What caused this? – Slide not dry
4. Retic count 18.3% along with really messed up blood picture. What do you do next? – Heinz body stain
(Supravital stain was also an option)
5. Iatrogenic anemia – due to excessive blood draws.
6. WBC and platelet count normal. Normocytic, normochromic anemia. RBC count very low and retic % is
0.1. – Pure red cell aplasia. Pretty sure I had never heard of this before the exam, but I figured it out. Other
options included aplastic anemia.
7. HgbA1C values would be decreased in – hemolysis/hemolytic anemia
8. What is the second, irreversible step in platelet aggregation studies? Or something like that. – I had no
idea, guessed change in platelet shape. Upon googling, it seems ‘release of nucleotides’ or something related
would be correct.
9. Know about the reagents used for PT and PTT in the automated coag studies. I had 2 questions where the
controls were off (and therefore patient results were off) but you needed to know which reagent to replace.
10. What cell type is increased in mononucleosis? – Lymphs
11. What will cause a decreased ESR?
12. Lupus anticoagulant causes what? – Increased risk of thrombosis
13. Sample taken from indwelling catheter. Patient isn’t on any anticoagulants yet PTT and TT are way
elevated. – Heparin contamination (from catheter)
CHEMISTRY/UA & BF
1. In which case is Mg monitored? – Eclampsia. Other options were vomiting and diarrhea.
2. I had two UA questions where I was given a list of results and had to choose the disease that correlated
with them. – Acute tubular necrosis and renal calculi.
3. 2 or 3 questions on dipstick false positive/negatives. Make sure you know these pretty well. I studied
them because other people mentioned it and still had trouble. – Blood and glucose were the two I know for
sure were asked about.
4. Hemolytic anemia/prehepatic issue, choose correct results for unconjugated & conjugated bili,
urobilinogen, and urine bilirubin.
5. Patient taking primidone showing toxicity, but blood levels normal. What do you do next? – Test
phenobarbital level.
6. Sperm count can be done on semen sample when… – Liquefaction is complete
7. Tumor marker seen in pancreatic cancer – CA 19-9
8. Cortisol and ACTH levels in adrenal Cushing’s.
9. Given values for fasting glucose and random glucose. What do you do next to diagnose diabetes? – Both
are over diagnostic values, so nothing else needed for diagnosis.
10. Fasting glucose 120. What’s the diagnosis? – Impaired fasting glucose.
11. Pheochromocytoma – Metanephrines
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7. know the thyroidism chart for inc and dec in TSH, t4 and T3
8. know PTH effects on Ca+
9. Know about aldosterone inc and dec and when it happens, (Conns) and effect on Na and K
10. Cushings is hyperglycemia
11. PTH and Ca+ relationship
12. something about perfringens i think
13. a tough hemoglobin C question
14. rouleaux is undetectable at what phase
15. CMV best to do viral culture (i think, but i guesses)
16. ESRD (1.010 sg and waxy casts predominate)
17. a couple of thrombin/ antithrombin questions
18. no VWF
19. know about heparin contamination and mixing studies and TT/fibrinogen times
20. HBA1C
21. rotavirus – stool
22. HTLV confirmation testing
23. weak D epitope something
24. whats wrong with this stain – acidic so change pH
25. sezary – t cell or congenital t cell (difference)
26. Amylase – mumps
27. something about rubella I forgot
28. enzyme effect on certain Abs (destroy, enhance)
29. about 4 questions about diabetes ( insipidus, mellitus, the ref ranges for cutoffs for diagnjosing)
30. Conn’s sydrome Aldo increases
31. jeikiem quesition about somehing idk
32. know different between glom nephritis. Pyelonephritis, nephrotic disesase, (conj, unconj, urobili)
33. had 1 metabolic acidosis question
34. had the PCR question – denature, anneal, extend
35. had a hypo hashimoto question about tsh inc
36. troponin stays in the system longest
37. 1 syphilis question… just know whats POS and NEG for each of he 3 phases ( the rpr and VDRL)
38. an aeromonas question where it gives you the rx it was something like oxi POS, and some other rxns
39. know the TSI slants ( I have a story for common imvic orgs that helps so if you want it let me know)
40. a really crappy grainy picuture of what looks like rbc agglutination/flocculation/some other crap … that
sais what should you do next – I chose heinz body stain (actually got this exact pic twice)
41. intrinsic resistances to common drugs (kleb amp R, Micrococcus R furosamide, stenotrophomonas
Bactrim Res , etc)
42. a lot of aldosterone related questions (like 5) and diseases associated with them
43. a couple of coag cascade questions like when to do an F8 assay
44. when to do PT (warfarin therapy)
45. TB testing PPD is T-cell mediated type 4 hypersensitivity rxn
46. know common markers for B and T lymphs (CD 19, 20/ CD 2,3,5,7, 4/8 mature)
47. if pt and ptt are inc what do you do next (exactly waht do you do next)
48. a s-load of bilirubin (like 7) know what happens in prehep, hep, post hepatic and nephrotic syndrome,
when you would expect to see jaundice associated with what Bilirubin, etc
49. absolutely no parasitology
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50. no myocology
51. almost no hematology
52. no AB/Ag frequencies
53. know (sensitivity = TP/TP +FN) and those others (SPECificity = TN/TN+TP) (PRECISION =
TP/TP+FP)
54. a bunch of lab ops questions (3 or 4)
55. no HDL.LDL.VLDL
56. a couple of tiny screen panels like if you have nothing thru iat in screen cells 1 and 2 except patient
sample shows up +/- on iat what do you perform next bla bla bla
……..a lot of “what do you perform next questions” related to BB so brush up on panels, DAT, IAT and
discrepancies
Thalassemias
Dimorphic fungi
Enterobacteriaciae biochems
Differentiating non-Lancefield streps
ABO discrepancies
G6PD deficiency
Transfusion testing requirements
Transfusion reactions
Elution, adsorption, absorption
Immunological testing types and methods
Pre, post, and hepatic jaundice (unconjugated, conjugated, bilirubinuria, urobilinogen, etc in each)
Gold standard chemistry tests, methods, and reagents used in them
DIC and MAHA characteristics and complications
Renin angiotensin system
Electrophoretic patterns
Type 1-4 hypersensitivity reactions
Cardiac markers
Coagulation studies and factor deficiencies
Inhibitors and what they inhibit in micro media
Urinary casts and associated conditions
ALL, AML, CML
Which preservatives are best for which stage of parasite and source of specimen.
**SURE POINTS: Heinz bodies (there were two questions with the exact picture in my exam, I answered
G6PD deficiency and anti-malarial drug (now this might be a bit confusing bec the one I had have
hypersegmentation, ovalocytes and tear drop cell; focus on the HEINZ BODIES!)
Klebsiella oxytoca (indole + as compared to K. pneumonia which is -) I also recommend Sohail’s notes on
Enterobacteriaceae (GNB; all of the high yield notes really, they were all very helpful! memorize them if
you can)
Alnernaria microscopic picture
Alkaline ph (9.4) I chose Paget’s disease bec of ALP.
Virus transported for 92 hours or something = Lyophilized (I’ve read this recall here, thank you so much!)
Olive oil = Malassezia furfur
CK (normal), cT (elevated) = Acute myocardial infarction (don’t be confused, since troponins increase faster
than CK, this findings can be possible). Order of increase/peak: MTCAL (myoglobin, troponin, CK-MB,
AST, LDH)
Bilirubin, Urobilinogen values (what disease association do they inc or dec)
ALP = obstruction
Chronic hepatitis = anti-smooth muscle antibody
Releases heparin/histamine = Basophils/mast cells
If Se and Le genes are both inherited, what phenotype? = Le(a-b+)
Pheochromocytoma = test for METANEPHRINE
Urinalysis results increase RBC (also strongly positive in strip) BUT neg in almost all of it =
glomerulonephritis
Another one is almost all were positive in rgt strip and in microscopy, but the highlight was the presence of
waxy cast so I chose= Nephrotic syndrome/dse
End stage of degeneration (renal failure) = waxy cast
HgbA1c decrease in = hemolysis (hemolytic anemia)
Lipoprotein that transport the majority of cholesterol=LDL
VLDL (endogenous triglycerides); Chylomicrons (exogenous TAG)
Gram neg cocci present after jaw surgery= Veillonella
Micrococcus = Resistance to Furazolidone
Tap water bacillus=Mycobacterium gordonae
Examination of semen sample, can proceed to sperm count = once the liquefaction is complete
Alpha thalassemia = Hgb Bart/Major (other choices were hgb D, sickle cell, etc)
Aeromonas hydrophila =GNB A/A G(+) on TSI, oxidase +
Procainamide = NAPA
Main metabolite of cocaine = benzoylecgonine
Type 1 hypersensitivity stimulated by = IgE
**Calculations: RhIg, Creatinine Clearance,
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**NOT QUITE SURE: Graph of ECA (Epinephrine, Collagen and ADP), two of them changed from 0
(either inc or dec), the other one is just 0. They will ask you which ones are normal/abnormal
They wavelength of the spectro was set to 540 but for some reason the staff keeps getting erroneous (higher
than the normal) transmittance, what seemed to be the problem? I chose halogen quartz as being the problem
I’ve read this from some of the recalls posted, about the calculation of potassium? Upon administration of
insulin, the glucose decreased, find the value of potassium (given values of insulin and glucose, I don’t
know the sol’n, please look for it if you can, I ignored this and then it appeared on my exam, haha tragic)
BLOOD BANK
ABO compatibility with blood groups-very important
Blood product that has highest capability of transmitting hepatitis
Temperatures for storage of blood products, how long, ABO compatibility and condition or reason for
transfusing product
Platelet temperature and PH- temperature of blood before processing( room temp).
OR schedule- how many units to prepare given blood group and antibody of patient
Kell frequency- 91% negative for antigen
Antigens of ABO system: Le with no Se( Lea+b-), Le with Se ( Lea-b+).
ABO discrepancy- subgroups of A, anti-A1 lectin
Cold antibodies and warm antibodies
Mixed field reactions- check transfusion history first
Controls for D-testing , Du test and AB+ control
Weak D- Missing epitopes, position effect.
IMMUNOLOGY
T-cell, B-cell lymphomas
IgG and IgM- which rises first
Hep A graph: antigen in stool-IgM-IgG
IgE- basophils and mast cells
Classic and alternate pathway complements
RA- IgM produced, autoantibodies to the Fc portion of IgG
FTA, RPR,VDRL, which is for testing reinfection, late stage and early stage
Treponemal antibody agglutination
Infectious mono- reactive lymphs and monocytes
Hepatitis- antigens and antibodies tested for each stage
HEMATOLOGY
Transferring- TIBC
Child swallowed naphthalene ball- Heinz bodies
Heinz bodies- DNA
RBC inclusions and corresponding diseases
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Anemias and what to find in RBC- pictures
Sources of error like in ESR and Hb
Stomatocytes- liver disease
Oxidant drugs, anti-malarial drugs effect on RBC
Hemoglobin electrophoresis- cellulose acetate-C S F A and the Hb it migrates with
Hemoglobinopathies- sickle cell solubility test and sources of error
Thalassemia- alpha- Barts and HbH
Beta- cooley’s anemia
Myelodysplastic syndrome- essential thrombocytemia( increase in PLT, splenomegaly).
COAGULATION
Mixing studies
PT & Aptt Factors
Protein C- how aspirin affects test( prolonged, increased or unaffected)
Platelet aggregation_ graph for ADP, epinephrine and collagen
Both PT and Aptt prolonged and then corrected
URINALYSIS
Bilirubin crystals- liver disease
Eosinphils in urine- interstitial nephritis
Monosodium urate- highly birefringent
HCG- pregnancy
Creatnine clearance- (UV/P)*(1.73/A)
Rhabdomyolysis- myoglobin
CHEMISTRY
Glucose levels-nomal and abnormal
ADH- increase water absorption
Iron test
Liver enzymes; hepatobiliary- ALP, GGT, 5NT
Hepatocellular- ALT AST
CK, troponin- MI
Amylase and lipase- pancreatitis, source of error
Solution/buffer for most ISE methods
Blood gases
Bilirubin – conjugated and unconjugated, urobilinogen
Hemolytic, hepatic, biliary obstruction
Immunosuppressant- tacrolimus- use whole blood
Azotemia- increase in BUN
TSH
Pheochromocytoma- VMA
K ISE- valinomycin
MICROBIOLOGY
Anaerobes- chopped meat agar( iron and glycerol)
Micrococcus- resistant to furazilidone
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Aeromonas- A/A, oxidase+
Acinetobacter- wounds
Erysipelothrix- H2S+, catalase+
Veillonella(g- cocci) and peptostreptoccus( gram+ cocci) – anaerobes causing jaw abscess
Picture of agar with chromoblastomycosis
Picture of blastomyces dermatitis
Geotrichum- arthroconidia
K. Pneumoniae and K. Oxytoca( indole+)
How to transport viruses after 96 hrs
Malasezzia furfur- oil
Zygomycota- sporangium
a person overdoses on salicylate and goes to the ER. WHAT WOULD BE TESTED?
a) pH
B) Ammonia
c)creatinine
d) BUN
A staph like organism is isolated from a wound culture in is resistant to all GPC antibiotics and to
Vancomycin, using the automated bichemical method.
what should the tech do.
a. do a gram stain
b. recallibrate the machine
c. report as not Susceptible?
If the stock solution had 9ml of saline and i add 1ml of serum making it 1;10
six test tubes labled Ato F contains 0.5ml saline in each.
i add 0.5ml of the stock solution to tube A and mix and the add 0.5ml to tube B and mix and add 0.5ml to
tube C and mix until i reach tube F.
What would be the dilution in tube F?
mycology (a recall question about zygomycete = sporangiospore). I also got calculations for Creatinine
Clearance, Hemocytometer count (if they show you squares, make sure you take into account both sides of
the hemocytometer). Bacillus anthras reactions were on there (non-motile, non hemolytic, catalase positive
etc.) I got a picture with pappeinheimer bodies ( poor pictures). I also got a picture that looked like a slide
with really prominent burr cells (abnormally sharp looking burr cells) and it asked what could have caused
it, I am not sure of the answer but I picked that the slide was not dry. I also got what is TP+TP=FN I had to
pick what is was (sensitivity). Another picture that looked like Heinz bodies and asked what stain to use
(answer was Heinz body stain). There were a lot of small panels for blood bank. Know what the RBC
inclusions are made of (DNA, RNA, Hgb). A question about what fungus you can test with hair ( I picked
Microsporum audounii) There was a question about Micrococci (answer Resistant to fluconazol). Rapid
latex test for Staphylococcus aureus and what it’s detecting. Something about Sodium dithionate and sickle
cell (I chose severe anemia). I had to Identify a picture with Blastomyces Dermatiditis. Know when to do an
elution, adsorption, descreptancies like when to test with Anti-A1. Know the difference between in Blood
Bank reactions with PCH, Polyagglutinine. Know if HDN is caused by Anti-D or ABO group. Know K
antigen frequency and if it will cause a reaction. Asked a question about HIV. Know the different types of
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electrophoresis, had some situational questions about Multiple Myeloma and whether to test with a different
type before confirmation.
Px chem result, you’ll see he has metabolic acidosis, what test are you going to order next, do you test for
salicylate or lead poisoning?
Graph which shows the order of serologic markers for hepa a; which is the correct one
A lot of mycology questions, describe histoplasma, molds that needs olive oil, what is the hair something
test use for to differentiate 2 fungi
For the ASCP certification the questions I received were mainly Blood Bank (LOTS of DATs, If mother is
type A- and baby is B+ what is the most likely cause of a HDFN?, What is the next step to determine if the
reaction is due to Rh or ABO discrepancy? Know how to recognize common discrepancies, etc.)
-Lots of Microbiology questions. The flow charts helped me SO much here. Even if I wasn’t sure of the
answer, I was able to eliminate wrong answers to reach a conclusion.
-I got 4 questions regarding RPR’s and VDRLs.
-1 question over parasitology
-A question that showed various titers of IgG and IgM for CMV and EBV and you were to determine if it
was an active infection of both or just one of the viruses
– 1 or 2 questions regarding Westgard rules and a graph
– Other subjects I remember: Cushing’s Disease, Metabolic/ Respiratory reactions (Bottom line approach
makes it easy), Thyroid diseases, ANA, Specificity vs Sensitivity, Bombay phenotype
Most of the questions are phrased differently than LabCE though. They are very situational (Ex. A nurse
draws a tube of blood for testing but is left out for 12 hours what tests can be run or do you reject it? Your
controls are out of range what could be the cause? Do you continue and process patient samples?) .
rbc inclusion associated when a toddler ingests a moth ball (naphthalene) — i believe the answer is Heinz
bodies. t(15;17) for promyelocytic leukemia or M3. APTT and PT mixing studies. for microbiology i had
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one question about Erysipelothrix and another about Bacillus anthracis. i didnt get any blood gas and ANA
questions at all.
BLOOD BANKING, most of them were about ABO discrepancies, DAT, HDN and they were all situational
hehe. I had some questions about blood component storage and processing (take note of the storage temp
and shelf life of each and how they are processed), transfusion rxns and donor deferral. Oh and I had several
panels but they were all obvious (there was a pattern). For HEMATOLOGY, they gave me more or less 5
abnormal blood pictures and I had to identify which disease is specific to that corresponding blood picture
(example: Burr cells – Uremia) I had one which goes “What red cell inclusion would appear on an infant’s
blood smear after accidentally swallowing a mothball?” — I believe the answer is Heinz bodies. I had
questions about sickle cell anemia, some leukemias, PT and APTT, mixing studies, and platelet aggregation.
I was also asked to calculate for MCV and corrected white cell count. For CLINICAL CHEMISTRY,
memorizing the reference values (refer to Polansky on this one) for each analyte especially bulirubin, BUN,
glucose, and blood gases would do you great help. Most questions were of case study type. You must be
familiar with the enzymes and hormones. Diseases/conditions I repeatedly encountered were
Hyperthyroidism, lactic acidosis, respiratory/metabolic acidosis/alkalosis, SIADH, Addison’s and Cushing’s
disease, diabetes mellitus and diabetes insipidus to name a few. I was asked to solve for osmolality, anion
gap and creatinine clearance too. For MICROBIOLOGY, it is important to memorize or be familiar with the
biochemical reactions (the charts in this site helped me a lot) for each bacteria especially Strep (CAMP,
PYR, hemolysis, growth on 6.5% NaCl, bile esculin etc) and Enterobacteriaceae (IMVIC, TSIA etc). Also
take note of the specific culture media for certain bacteria (ex: Fletcher medium – Leptospira). Some species
that I could remember from my exam were Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae and Bacillus anthracis. I also had
questions about Fungi and their biochemical reactions and a few about viruses and parasites (autoinfection –
Strongyloides). For URINALYSIS AND BODY FLUIDS, all that I can remember is that I was given a
photo of a cast and crystal and I had to identify which types were shown and something about CSF, exudates
and transudates. For IMMUNOLOGY/SEROLOGY, they were mostly about immunoglobulins and serial
dilution. I had one question about PCR. I was asked to identify one ANA pattern too and the corresponding
disease. And last but not the least, I had a few questions about TOXICOLOGY that I was completely
clueless of.
Blood bank: mostly ABO grouping discrepancies and Antibody screen probs- what u should do if u
encounter this and that; and two questions about how many units do u need if you want this antigen-negative
blood (given its frequencies in the population)
Hematology: cells in the smear ID; computations- diff count, cell counts; then which stain to use for this
type of inclusion, hemoglobin suddenly decreases, platelet aggregation
Chemistry- i was asked to read and interpret HIV-1 immunoblot; questions about Hemolytic anemia (bili,
urobili,haptogobin); i was asked about in what condition do you need to monitor Magnessiun, or when does
K+ increase.
AUBF- nitrite question, when to suspect presence of contrast dye, reagent strip interferences
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Know your GNR flowchart. I got at least 7 questions out of it. Include moraxella and acinetobacter to it
because I neglected to include those to my chart.
Sharpen up on your antibody panel screen. I got at least 7 questions from it.
MYCOLOGY!! I got at least 9 questions including pictures. I think I bombed half of it.
I didn’t get lots of chemistry, I can guarantee you that. I braced myself for that subject and end up not
getting many.
I got a few questions in hemo that included a couple coagulation questions about mixing studies and lab
results for DIC TTP ITP.
Hematology:
Picture of RBC inclusions- i think i got HJ Bodies
Lots of Anemias IDA, DIC lab findings
Low RBC Low HGb Elevated MCV MCHC- cause
Stomatocytes picture- what disease
Protein C
Predominant cell type lineage in CLL
Causes of incr & dec ESR
Lots of PT & PTT result disease correlation
Coagulation factors
Platelet Disorder
Chemistry
COV computation
Bilirubin result after caffeine for DB and IB
Inc Gluc dec Na K – disease
findings in SIADH
Cushings
VMA – disease
Blood Bank
Lots of ABO discrepancies and resolution
Cryoppt storage and expiration after pooled
Platelet apheresis
Mixed Field
Antibody screening
Calculation of number of units and frequencies given
Immunology
ANA pictures and diseases
-picture of echinocyte
-picture of blastomyces dermatitidis
-Stomatocyte picture: what disease is related? LIVER DISEASE.
-no bloodbank panel but really lots of DAT. ABO descrepancies. And what are the remedies. (focus more on
this)
-chemistry. how to measure hdl. I chose thin-layer but I really dont know. Ultracentrifugation was not on the
choices.
1. Negative, positive control for CAMP, BILE ESCULIN, 6.5% NaCl, Bacitracin
Choices were mainly Strep family. Study them.
2. Hba1c – 5%, FBS – 155mg/dL
– good long term control but poor recently
3. Caffeine for Diazo reaction
– to measure unconjugated bil
4. Enzyme uses pnp maintained in pH 9.8 increase in what dse
– Pagets
5. Elevated lipase buy normal amylase appearance of plasma
– Lipemic
6. Measurement of iron
– step1: addition of acid
– step 2: addition of reducinh agent
– step 3: add color rgt
7. Estrogen increase in pregnant women
– Estriol
8. Female patient on mesntruation
– I forgot the exact choices but I choice the lab results correlating with IDA
9. TIBC
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– Trasferrin
10. Stomatocytes
11. Burr cells
12. Echinocytes
13. Alternaria
14. http://library.med.utah.edu/WebPath/IMMHTML/IMMIDX.html
– study the autoimmune diseases part. Slide 4 was on my test. Exact image.
15. Pheocromocytoma, measure
– Cortisol or Metanephrines : torn between these two hahaha
16. Blastoconidia
17. Definition of Oliguria
18. Measurement of FLM
– phosphatidyl
19. Indole positive, A/A TSI
– K. oxytoca
20. Present after jaw surgery
– if the question was looking for gram neg: Veilonella
– if gram pos: Peptostreptococcus
21. Detextion of Rubella
– IgG 2 weeks interval
22. Zygomycete
– i answered the one with sporangiospore
23. The famous HEINZ BODIES on napthalene something haha
24. SIADH
– decreases Na
25. Case study about urine but the clue was present fat bodies
– Nephrotic
26. Azotemia
– Im really not sure with my answer because the choices have
A. increase bun
B. increase creatinine
But I picked BUN
27. Just remember that in Protein C taking warfarin therapy
– it would decrease
28. The blood glucose was given 390mg/dl, potassium 4.2mmol after insulim administration glucose is 215
potassium is now? Note that this is kot the exact values given
– I really do not know the answer but as insulin increase, potassium would decrease. Just know how to solve
this because the choices were values
29. Olive oil
– Malassezia furfur
30. Rotavirus test
– i also dont know the answer but I picked electron microscopy something
31. Sezary cells
– T cells
32. Case study about skin testing blabla
– T cells also
Micro
– I drew my gpc and gnb chart put before I answered any of my micro question. I got 4-5 question about
gpc, gnb
– 1 question about micrococcus
– 2 question about plasmodium – which one is not show on the blood smear in troph
-4-5 mycology question( at this point, I was like:” why am I so not lucky”
Immunology:
– Ana positive shows what pattern
– picture and pick what kind of pattern: rim, speckle, ect
– chart of 1st and 2nd expose and tell them which a, b, c, d line are first and second response
– 1-2 hepatitis questions… But not in a traditional form of questions . One question was like : which blood
product has a greatest risk transfer hep b( so I guess this is kinda a blood bank questions)
Chem:
I got few easy ones: such as amalyse for mumps, tn/ tp
2-3 blirubin questions
Urine:
3-5 questions
Heme
I had mostly Heme and Bloodbank. Heme was mostly hemagrams with abnormals asking for diagnosis or
possible interference and some nrbc/wbc corrections, plt est and rbc inclusions, bloodbank I had tons of RH
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questions and basic antibody ID from warm and cold. Know your enzymes and effects. DAT IAT screening,
donor qualifications. Chem I had some enzyme questions and calculations for GFR, AG, and creat
clearance. Coag was basic intrinsic and extrinsic questions, know INR and the discrepancies with the times
of pt and ptt. Micro, had about 10 to 15 questions.
-I had a lot of mycology question (5) I believe, I’m pretty sure I got all of them wrong. They told me
description and showed me a picture and I still got it wrong. I never really studied mycology and the ones I
did never showed up.
-Had a picture of a pinworm and needed to know its real name and I didn’t get any more parasite questions
after that.
-Chemistry: Effect of hemolysis on chemistry analytes, effect of IV line on chemistry analytes, Diabetes,
non-ketoacidosis coma, enzymes for liver, enzymes to help ID muscle problems, cardiac enzymes, what
creatinine clearance was (not the formula but what it actually tests–the physiology of it), a weird LDL +
HDL methodology that came up twice (how can you separate them–I thought it was ultracentrifugation but
that wasn’t even a choice, so if anyone knows please help enlighten me), given a bunch of analytes and their
result (without the reference range) and was expected to know which one should be repeated (on it was
BUN, osmo, Cl-, Na+, K+, and yeah… wasn’t sure of the answer on this one either). How to tell hepatic
from an obstruction and what the test would show
-Urinalysis: what it means if someone has a normal serum glucose but a positive glucose urine test,picture of
a cast with refractile circles and they asked you what other tests will help confirm it(?, choices were Sudan
black, oil red O, picked oil Red O for some reason)–the almost exact picture can be found on labce
-Immunology: i had a question where it showed a picture of serum IFE and a gamma band and a light chain,
and told you that the urine light chain had that light chain as well. Then asked what your next action could
be: potential multiple myeloma, redo it again because ULC and S-IFE were not the same.
-Had some trouble shooting question and what would you do if the control you reconstituted were all
whacky on all of your analyzers. Check the H2O you used, used new lots, or used fresh control.
-BB: panels are usually straightforward (I mean they do give some choices so that helps), but the tricky ones
were the What would you do next if your forward had a positive Anti-B but your serum all came negative
(reincubate at 37, report it out, redraw,) or for antibody screen if you wanted to rule out certain things what
would you do (requires your knowledge about enzyme and its effect on on the different antigens)–what
helped me to remember some were Duffy= gets Destroyed by enzyme
-Micro: the charts given on this site honestly are really helpful. they nitpick, I had one where I had to
differentiate between Morganella and Providencia but it gives you a list of three different tests, and if you
knew the answer it’s pretty simple because usually there’s one really wrong answer in all the other choices.
Some mnemoics: MINOP )mirabilis Indole neg, o(something) positive—sorry my brain is getting fried at
the moment, or K-PIN (klebsiella pneumoniae indole neg, E-COP (entero cloceae orthine positive),
recommend making sure you memorize the chart on this site.
-what organisms would you look for in a patient with Cystic fibrosis
-Anaerobes Gram negative cocci that causes a disease involving the jaw
-know how to read a TSI slant and ID the organism from it
-know the differences between the Gram negative bacilli (like Enterobactericeae are all oxidase – (except
plesimonas) vs the Oxidase+ GNB (like Aeromonas and the others), know the HACEK (the disease
associated with them I got a question that told me symptoms and what it looked like and the biochemical
and was expected to know it)
-Had two antibiotics question what other antibiotic would used to help ID a mecA gene (or something like
that)–choices were vanco, ampicillin, penicillin, methicillin.
Micro
-Atleast 5 Mycology questions (wth), I was clueless on all of them
-No Parasitology for me
-3 Strep questions that can be easily answered by flow chart on this site (add bile solubility for Strep B-
hemolytic to it)
-Staph questions – can be answered by flow chart on this site (add Mannitol to it)
-5 Enterobacteriace questions – Knowing IMVICs, TSIs, H2S producers, Lactose Fermenters and I used
flow charts from yellow and purple book (Flow chart on this site is good, but I already was committed to
bottom line approach)
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-Nocardia – branching
-A/A+g what would you expect to see on HE agar – orange
Chem/BF
-Oral Contraceptives – Increase in serum Fe
-ABGs!! – I had 3 acid/base disorders, one with partial compensation
-Calculate Osmolality (2 times), one of them didn’t have the answer (i tried both formulas), picked the
closest one to the correct calculated osmolality
-Calculate Anion Gap
-Chylomicrons cause layer at top of tube
-Hashimoto’s – T4 decrease, TSH increase
-Turbid synovial fluid – (I put because of crystals)
-aHCG – Pacreatic CA or testicular? I picked Pacreatic
-4 Routine dipstick discrepancies
-Uroblilinogen false pos = Porphobilinogen
-Atleast 5 Jaundice questions – (know the urobilinogen reference range (along with the bilirubin reference
ranges) something like 0.2 EU for urobilinogen) – Table in yellow and purple book made most easy
-caffeine benzoate in bilirubin assay – Accelerator
Blood Bank
-Easy Panels (just identify, you have to use the Pearson Vue dry erase sheet to write out the antigens (not a
big deal, but i guess if you are practicing, practice by writing out just the antigens on a sheet of paper.)
-ABO discrepancies (cold agglutinin, Roleux, no reaction on reverse type)
-Most severe HDN – ABO (BOC book)
-2 – RhIG calculation – Calculate vials, calculate feto-maternal hemorrage volume (same as BOC
book/Media lab)
-QC for granulocytes (Yellow and purple book)
-Bombay Phenotype – hh
-Avoid allergic rxn something IgA – IgA/Washed RBCs
Hematology
-2 questions – given absolute lymphocyte count, calculate CD56/calculate CD4 (I used 50% CD4, 25%
CD8, 15% B, 15% NK – relative to calculate) – numbers came out where there was a clear cut answer
-Calculate LAP score
-Calculate Corrected WBC
-Myeloid Leukemia question that had indices, <10 blasts (thanks wordsology)
-Lots of blood smears, identify disease (look for the hallmark rbc/wbc deformity/inclusion – answers were
mostly clear
-2 Histograms (identical to BOC book)
Immunology/Molecular/Other
-Trepanomal highest specificity – FTS
-No ANAs!!…i thought this was going to be huge
-Flourometry – protect yourself from what – excited light or emitted light?
-PCR steps – the one that starts with Denature, Anneal
Had some very specific molecular bio and other related questions that were total greek to me, meant to be
answered wrong on the computer adaptive test i guess. I had one (impossible) question in which B and C
were the exact same answer (I picked B). Most pics were very pixelated, they looked like resized avatars.
Those ASCP questions need to be QC’d.
specific gravity in urine testing, polycythemia vera, Burr cell, stomatocytes, CLIA requirement in
competency, Cushing syndrome, defer donor in blood bank, lipemia interference, a few myco questions
related to dimorphic, dermatophytes, blastoconidia, 2 ANA questions, CSF storage temp, diabetes, blood-
gas, hemolytic anemia, DIC, Lupus, confirmed test method for HTLV, Pseudomas, Addision, how to detect
early renal failure, a few UA case study questions, etc…
As for what I was asked – I was given a panel – these are easy points. Really, they give you the possible
antibodies and all you have to do is focus on those. I was asked some very basic things like, B cells
produce…. Thrombin time and why it would be increased or affected. I was asked about Beer’s law (yeah…
I totally look over that… not). I was asked about absorbance, also I had two hematology histograms – see
pages 204/205. It was like those but not those questions. I had several (maybe 4) TSI slants… sometimes I
was given the picture, sometimes not. I was given two or three questions about agars and what grows on
them, or if they were this color, what did that mean. I had several questions about which of the following
would be VP positive, this positive and this positive and I’d have to pick the answer. I think I had three of
those. I had a question about keratitis and the answer was Acanthamoeba…The Bottom Line book has a lot
of quick and easy ways to remember things, like for keratitis and Acanthamobea… Kerry, aCanthamoeba
causes Keratitis; associated with trauma to the eye. I was asked about Enterobius vermicularis… both were a
pic to id it from (very similar to the ones in BOC but just had more of them in it), and then a question about
what test you’d use to ID it but it still gave you the picture of Enterobius, so make sure you can ID them. I
had some questions about glucose ox. converts glucose to gluconic acid …….. I picked and the answer is
H2O2.. thank you bottom line! I had two questions that gave you a urinalysis and it would show you a pH
and then say they found these crystals… what would you do. There is one like this in the BOC book. All
you’re doing is looking at the pH and then thinking, is those crystals acidic or? What should you do? I had
several questions about D/fetal/mom… those are to be expected. I had several questions about prehepatic.
hepatic and post/obstructive… several, maybe 4 or 5? Sometimes they were easy and sometimes I had to
really think about them. There is a wonderful chart in the Bottom line book that is a life saver if you ask me.
Also, be prepared to see enzyme questions – liver and heart. I think I had two or three. I had several
questions about discrepancies in ABO… like is it an auto, allo, subgroup, rouleaux…. I knew going in that
BB was going to be my weakest. Uh, I did not have any questions regarding hep B, but I did have some on
hep A. I had several questions on principles of antigen-antibody testing, like immunofixation, agglutination,
etc. I had some questions on elutions, adsorption, neutralization so make sure you look over those and
understand them.
I did not get any questions on crystals (none that required me to ID them), none on casts at all. I did get
asked about the nephron and what is happening where, filtration rate, silly stuff. I did have some questions
regarding rbcs and disorders or diseases so be ready for those.
Use anything possible to remember any and everything that you have to think twice about while studying.
ie:
IMViC
PEE: IM (+) positive you’ll have to PEE
Proteus Vulgaris
E. coli
Edwardsiella
Are “IM” indole & methyl red positive. Along w/ studying chart off wordsology you will be able to id
organisms w/ out a doubt.
3. Case studies about lactic acidosis, and which patient reflects lactic acidosis.
6. Preferred specimen for tacrolimus (but I could not remember the other names of the drugs)
***I think I selected whole blood
8. What is the immunity test (I think it was immunity, I could not remember but something like that) for
CMV?
a. Latex agglutination
b. Heterophile test
c. Culture
d. Electron microscopy
***I got this one wrong coz I selected latex agglutination but I could not remember the source but it says
viral culture. Check this link http://labtestsonline.org/understanding/analytes/cmv/tab/test/
12. Which of the following shows dosage (or does not show dosage, I could not remember) but memorize
the antibody that shows dosage
a. M
b. FYa
c. E
d. Leb
15. Patient has walking pneumonia but treatment shows penicillin resistance because:
***One of the choices “no cell wall”
19. Normocytic, normochromic, normal WBC, normal platelet, but retics is 0.1%
a. Pure red cell aplasia
b. Fanconi’s anemia
c. Aplastic anemia
20. Blood smear picture that looks like Howell bodies, the retic is 18%, the technologist should stain with?
a. Stain Heinz- body staining
b. Prussian stain
c. Repeat retic
***(it confuses me because Retic was 18% and the blood smear looks Howell bodies but I selected Heinz
body staining)
21. What is the problem or effect of dextran sulfate as anticoagulant in blood transfusion (something like
that)
a. Destroy D antigen (something like that)
b. Solubility like antigen activity
***Cold not remember otherrchoices
24. CBC result, Hct did not match Hgb (Hbg x3), what causes the false increase of Hgb?
***one of the choices is lipemia
26. Target cell blood smear, what is the effect of target cell on instrument (something like that)
30. Pink colony on Mac, citrate positive, Lysine=neg, Ornithine posiive, Arginine positive
a. Kleb Pnuemonia
b. Kleb oxytoca
c. E. aerogenes
d. E. cloceae
31. Cystic fibrosis associated with P. aeruginosa and organism that is catalase positive, oxidase positive:
a. Acinetobacter
b. B. cepacia
c. Could not remember other choices
35. Acid-fast bacilli, potassium permanganate is used as: (I saw this on ASCP-BOC book)
a. Quenching agent
b. Mordant
c. Dye
d. Decolorizing agent
Lactose fermenter, Oxidase + , A/A… choices are enterobacter, pseudo, hafnia and seratia..
then, picture of red cell inclusion, TP/TP + FN
Procaine assay-NAPA
Blood unit expiration date when glycerol is added
Apolipoprotein A- HDL
Donor requirements- pick the one that didn’t make the cut. My answer was HCT 37
Lots of antibody panels
What’s indicative of teardrops? Had 2 questions referring to teardrops
Had one on the stain being too blue and what do you do? Decrease ph buffer
Classic Ida pbs
Muscle damage enzymes- ast, ck, ld
Cushings and addisons. Which one has increased glucose and dec
Herease?
Which mycobacteria is in drinking water?
Which parasite can cause auto infection?
What does the rbc morphology look like with hookworm that’s been there for years
How is ldl extracted from HDL? Heparin-manganese
What is creatinine clearance?
What’s the purpose of the caffeine in bilirubin? Take the albumin off
I had no ANA questions
Difference between yersinias? Motility at 25
Acute hepatitis markers
Calculate cv, question gave sd and mean and you had to pick which one had the best cv
One dilution question. It stated off with a 1:2 and made a 1/3 out of that.
Increase urine glucose, what else should correlate with it on a diabetic patient.
No rhizoids- Mucor
I would suggestion writing down the normal ranges whenever they are given to you. Some questions have it
and some don’t. It’s helpful for the ones that don’t.
I had a couple acid base questions.
Mixing study questions
Fungal stain- cotton blue
Microbiology.. Dimorphic Fungi. Differentiating characteristics of the Enteros. TSI of E.coli , E. cloacea, P.
mirabilis and P vulgaris.
LDC : SEA Salmonella, E. coli, Arizona
ODC: YEP + SMS Y. entercolitica Edwardsiella, P mirabilis and Enteros Salmo, Morganella and Serratia
++–
E coli
Morganella
Edwardsiella
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–++
Enterobacter
Serratia
-+–
Salmonella
++-+
Providencia
-+-+
Arizona
Citrobacter
The Sezary syndrome question, the whooping cough question, and the CMV question specifically
1. Sezary cell
2. 3 questions about Sensitivity vs Specificity (compare 2 methods)
3. Antibodies detected in Speckled pattern of ANA
4.Enzymatic controls were outside 3SD, while the Non-enzymatic controls were within 2SD, What’s the
cause? (something like that)
5.Something about blastoconidia (sorry but I suck in Myco, I just guessed)
6.Previous VDRL result of CSF is positive. But the lab ran out of the reagent. The RPR is done but negative,
what should the technologist do next?
Some choices: report is as negative. report as positive, inactivate the CSF and do RPR again, plus one more
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choice.
7. 2 questions about presence/absence of Bilirubin and Urobilinogen in hemolytic anemia. (you need to be
familiar with this)
8.Enzymes to diagnose Muscular dystrophy
9.Be familiar with the Enterobacteriaceae reactions.
10.Be familiar with reactions of Strep regarding NaCl, BE, etc. (I had couple of questions)
11.ABO discrepancies
12.Cause of decreased zone of inhibition in Oxacillin disk diffusion
some choices: using 1.0 McFarland suspension; media pH is 7.2, more
13.When should you do sperm count?
choices:As soon as it is received,
Within 3 hours,
Before Liquefaction,
After liquefaction is complete.
14.What is added before doing cell count of Synovial fluid?
15.Pictures of peripheral smear and you have to check the disease associated with it
1. PSA px with prostate gland removed 12 months ago, has a somthing like increase PSA result. so what is
the condition?
a. Test sensitivity
b. Test specificity
c. Recurrence of dse
d. i forgot the other choice
2. Blood collected from EDTA for bld typing and antibody screen, shows MF rxn on AHG and IS.
a. report result
b. adsorb somthing like that
c. recollect serum specimen
d. i forgot again sorry
9. Rotavirus – stool
12. severe normochromic normocytic anemia, normal WBC and platelet hast 0.1% retic count
a. red cell aplasia
b. fanconis anemia
c. aplastic anemia
13. presence of dextran in blood typing something like that, what can be an error
15. picture of pinkish and crenated RBCs with 1 granulocyte that has pink nucleus, what is the cause?
a. pH buffer
b. ethanol fixing
35. Hba1c levels result in px with sickle cell disease and hemolytic anemia
Aquired B, what A1 lectin is, TSI slant reactions ( I had two questions about this), Entomoeba histolytica,
normal volume of sperm, sickle cell electropheresis, sickle cell anemia photos, AFP, LDL, rbc indicies,
corrected wbc count, anion gap…(I have had this all three times), Hep B stages of infection, passive
immunity, aquired immunity, urine casts and where they are formed, CSF fluid, staph questions, strep
questions, veionella- not sure if I spelled it correctly, mycobacterium, nocardia, I had a few BB questions on
Bombay
what nutrient is incorpriate in anaerobic ager to aid the growth of anaerobes I choses (glycerol and iron). A
bacterial with A TSI A/A or acid over acid meaning the organisming is a fertermnt muciod pink on
MacConkey nonmotile but indol positive I chose (klebsiella oxcitical). Omg this question right out of the
BOC the question ask what are the characteristics of Microcouse is show they were suscepibal to
(Furazolidone) to is question 125 from the BOC. The difference between Yersina entrocolitica and peptis
and I chose ( motility). And question 235 from the BOC twisted around a blood culture grew a grew a
bacterial that was thought to be a contaminate something of the sought and I chose (propionibactterium) and
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question from the BOC 330 twisted around.A mycobacterial that cause a water contaminat I chose
(mycobacterium Gordonae) and it was right. Anther question BOC 313. The same way when stain acid fast
bacilli with truant auramine-rhodamine stain potassium Permanganate is used to I chose ( quenching
florencent background) and I was right is a quenching agent. Another similar question from the BOC to 304
to 307 why are first morning sputum needed for mycobacteria I chose (because if septum is held overnight
the septum is invaded).
For chermistery I remember the following.
Instead of the whole liver panel they ask similar BOC 144, 145 ezyme do u see most in obstrctive jundiace
or hepatoculluar obstruction between ALP and ALT and other ezymes I chose ( ALP) question. A caculation
question of creatinine clearance question no the formula C=uv/p know that u always divide the total urine by
1440 and this is = to your volum. What you use to measure and instrument that absorb a flurecent light and
transmit it at a large wave light I chose (. Flurometer) another question an instrument that. And an ezyme
Usero measure choles something I chose (GGT) beause I thougt of alcohol when I saw the word coholes and
didn’t see any thing about the lipid test so I went with that. BOC question 311 in the chermistery section the
same question to detect barbiturate abuse when analyzing urine specimen I chose ( gas chromatography and
mass spectrometry).
PSA reference values and free/total ratio and what 7% free PSA means. HepB “anti-core window”. Free
fatty acids to grow what fungus. Lots of blood bank ABO discrepancies. Pos DATs, mf reactions. LOTS of
blood bank and quite a few urinalysis on the whole. Lewis antibodies in saliva of Group A Le(a-b+). HUS
associated with E. coli. A few questions about Bilirubin and urobiliogen in urine/serum/feces.
Direct/Indirect Bili. Know pre/post hepatic jaundice. A question about Erchlich’s test for urobilin/porpho
test. Factor V Leiden and what it does. Coumarin therapy and how it affects. Theophylline therapy in babies
and test for toxicity of what? HepB ANA homogenous/speckled/anti-smooth muscle/or anti-thyrotropine?
…. What does plasmin do. Lots of urine strip test questions, like . CSF standing in room temp for 3 hours
affects: immunoglob neutralization, glucose, etc. CSF should be stored for later testing how: -20C, -70C,
RT, etc. Cushings shows: hyper/hypoglycemia or hypo/hyper calcium. Question about inappropriate ADH
syndrome: decreased serum sodium, increased glucose, etc. Mg needs to be monitored in: severe vomitting,
head injury, etc. bHCG level for positive control. Salmonella Paratyphi A. Sickle Cell test interference. Low
serum erythropoein levels in what disease. Normocytic/Normochromic severe anemia with 0.1% retics;
Fanconi’s anemia? One calculation: corrected WBC count. Pheochromocytoma. Catecholamines in urine.
What does 5HIAA in urine mean. Given electrolyte panel and blood gases, what to measure: ethyl glycol,
lead, salicylate, etc. Given picture of Auer Rods, confimatory testing (Phili Chromosome?)
Absolute/Relative lymphocytosis/lymphopenia. A few questions (at least 3) about
precision/sensitivity/specificity with true positives, false pos, true negs and false negs. My question was
TP/(TP+FN)=? What are blastoconidia. Stain for cryptosporidium. Mycoplasma and arylsulfatase testing.
Seminal fluid volume, motility, abnormal %. Distinguishing characteristic of micrococcus (furazolidone
resistant). Non-fluorescing bacteria like Pseudomonas. I hope this helps!! Lot’s of random detailed
questions…. These are probably the harder questions since I can remember them. Ex. of an “easy” question I
got would be: shape of tyrosine crystals in urine, but not too many of those gimmes. It was hard, not gonna
lie.
Tumor marker to monitor breast cancer(CA-15-3). Test for inflammation(CRP). Sweat test ..which of the
following is used to clean the skin…70% alcohol, Water, Betadine. Respiratory Alkalosis. Anti Immune
disease with an elevated ALP. Clinitest result turns quickly from blue to orange and back to blue….is this
test pos or neg? 10ml of chemical sol spilled in the lab…pull the fire alarm, clean the spill, ask everybody to
– if there is a rouleaux formation on the blood what will you do? (bunch of choices-forgot what the choices
was) = saline replacement
– Slide of a smear = it was metamyelocyte
– Slife of immature celles (mye,meta,looks like blasts etc) what test to confirm? a. ph chromosome b. sudan
c. oil red d. pas = Not sure with the answer but I choose “a”
– xmatch: DCe/DCe recepient, xmatched with 4 donors, DCE/DCE, dCe/DCE, etc.- anyway there were 4
donors and 2 of them incompatible then asked what Ab is present: Choices: a, C and D b. E and D c. anti c
d. anti E ( sorry not perfectly sure what the right choices are but you get the point)
– Some urine strip questions (yup I think I had 4 of them!) = patient came from radiology with urine sg
1.054 done on refractometer and 1.028 on strip what are you going to do or something : a. strip deterioted b.
result matched c. calibrate the refractometer d. correlate result with ph
– rgt strip protein negative but SSA 2+ what the cause? cant remember the exact choices the only one I
remembered for this is , false neg due to amorphour urates or other protien present,
– I had a pix of electropheresis of SLE: a rim b. centromere c. nucleolar d. diffuse – I think I answered
centromere here not sure
– What rgt deteriotes faster when in use a. MN b. Le c. Jka d. Fya
– Jka ruled out but not anti c and anti Kell. tested for Ag Anti Kell = Anti c +? a. comfirmed c but cannot
rule out k b. cannot rule out c. confirmed K but not c d. confirmed c but kell can neither be ruledout or
confirmed
– nephrotic dse what is seen? a alpha 2 b. albumin, c. gamma d. alpha 1 (not sure with the exact wording on
this but you get the point)
Passed. Some of what I got: Antibody least likely to display dosage, Bilirubins in hemolytic anemia, Tumor
marker question, calculate RBC count from hemocytomer with given dilution and squares counted, slide
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with picture of stomatocytes what disease state, diabetes given fasting 128 Glucose tolerance >200, badly
stained slide with crenated rbcs what caused, formula given specificity or sensitivity, fluorescence protect
yourself from what, slide with blast with auer rods stains most beneficial for diagnosis, slide with RBC
agglutination saw twice one time incompatible transfusion other cold agglutinin, RBC H/H given rule of 3
do not correlate lipemia, bile stained “mammillated” (yes BS wording) Ascaris lucky guess, 1+ leukocyte
esterase no WBC’s seen why, list of Coag results post surgery indicative of what, an acute hep question
(again BS wording) made more difficult than should of been think I got right, unit released brought back
within 30 min but “entered” (damnit into what) on floor discard, picture of TSI tube what org. My take I feel
like I was tested on reading comprehension more than my ability to not kill someone, would not be surprised
if I got exactly 400. I think I changed a couple that I was on the fence on, problem is I think they were right
initially. About 4 questions were related in that I had no idea but after seeing the other question I could
deduce the answer to the initial question. Had no full Ab panels but some weird mini panels, some
discrepancies (not exactly easy), no cardiac enzymes, no thyroids, maybe one blood gas, one or two fungals
(probably missed maybe got lucky). Anywho, study hard and you should do fine. Thanks and good luck.
Hi there!
I used your website over the past two months to prepare for the ASCP MLS exam. I took my exam this
morning and passed! I just wanted to say thanks to you for putting this site together. It allowed me to
organize a study plan that worked.
To those who are preparing to take the exam, study his micro charts! They include everything you need to
know to make it through the micro questions on the exam.
Questions I saw on the exam today (July 2013): abnormal PT and APTT results, ANA patterns, RIST vs.
RAST, lots and lots of micro biochemical reactions, several antibody panels, abnormal cells on peripheral
slides and hematology values, many questions over liver enzymes and bilirubin metabolism, a few over the
thalassemias, a couple of parasitology and mycology questions, one question over education objectives, one
protein electrophoresis, corrected WBC calculation (nRBC), two dilution calculations
I used this website to organize my study plan. I studied for a little less than two months for a few hours per
day. The week before the test, I reviewed the main four subjects and studied several hours per day.
Hi I took the test today and passed. I have to say it was very hard and like others have mentioned I was
pretty sure I had failed around question 50. MY questions certainly didn’t get any easier at the end! There
test and shaking, I had to sit in my car for awhile before leaving .
I studied on and off for a few months before taking this exam, which I highly DON’T recommend. Bob Harr
was my program director, so I had his book memorized because he and all of my other teachers used
questions from his book for our exams. I also used the review book by Patsy Jarrean, along with this site and
LABCE. I was very fortunate with my clinical experience and was able to use that knowledge for most of
the questions. When I took the LABCE exams, I was scoring in the upper 400’s and lower 500’s. Questions
on LABCE repeated themselves semi-often and some of the explanations for correct choices were unhelpful.
For example, if I got a question wrong it would say “Answer: 41565 was the correct answer. Description:
41565 is the correct answer.” If you can get a classmate to buy a subscription and share their password with
everyone else, I would do that.
The exam wasn’t too bad. For every question I had no idea what to pick, I guessed B (like Harr said). Take
your time, I had an hour left when I finished. I went back through and tried to memorize as many questions
as I could, mainly for this site. I didn’t change a single answer, it is best not to second guess yourself. You
can take a calculator in with you, but you leave everything, even watches and pens, behind. They give you a
marker and a dry-erase board so you can write anything down. I immediately wrote all the micro charts from
this site, along with a few calculations. You can take a break any time, but time still ticks down. I took a 15
My advice, schedule your exam early because dates can fill up fast. I tried to sign up for a day during the
first week of the month, but there was only 1 slot available the whole month. Pearson doesn’t just offer
medical related exams, they do stuff for all trades. Also, make sure you send your transcripts in advance to
ASCP or they will not send you the certificate. It takes about 3-5 weeks to send your certificate if you have
everything submitted.
Because I don’t want to give incorrect answers and steer you wrong, I tried to say most of the choices that I
can remember. I scored in the upper 400’s on the ASCP, so I’m no genius. Also, double check all my
answers before studying. Answers with a question mark are ones that I am not 100% sure are correct. Also
note that if I only list 3 of 4 answers, that’s because I cannot recall the 4th choice. There may be another
“better” answer that I cannot remember.
The majority of questions on your exam will probably be on your weakest areas, as confirmed by me and a
few classmates. I studied 3/4 of the main areas hard, but got screwed by my weakest.
Chemistry:
1) LDL calculation – straight up, no gimmicks
2) HDL was 34, Trig was 400, and cholesterol was 235. LDL was directly tested and was 169. (P.S. if you
know the correct answer to this, please tell me. I know that you cannot calculate the LDL if the Trig is above
400, but I keep second guessing myself)
A) Report out calculated LDL
B) Retest Triglycerides and recalculate LDL
C) Retest cholesterol and recalculate LDL
D) Recollect while fasting
3) Gave 4 anion gap equations and asked which one would give an error – one had a negative value
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4) Asked the definition of an automated delta check
5) Analyzer is set to delta check sodium at +/-7. Of these results, which would delta check? (and yes, there
were 2 that would “technically” delta check”)
Day 1: 137
Day 2: 141
Day 4: 132
Day 5: 137
Day 7: 136
Day 8: 142
Day 10: 134
A) Day 1
B) Day 4
C) Day 8
D) Day 10
6)Patient with HA1C of 5%, glucose is 150. – Patient was following diet for beginning of 3 months and
stopped.
7&8)Know your chemistry enzymes from the chart on this site. It is EXTREMELY helpful.
Which of the following is increased in skeletal muscle disorder
ALP is elevated in____
9) Bromide affects which electrolyte?
10) HDL precipitation, what is the use of Heparin-manganase?
Heme:
1) Picture of sickle cells – asked which reagent should be used to diagnose
2) 4 year old has increased N/C ratio with cells containing 2 nucleoli. (no picture) Choices:
A) Lymphoblast
B) Monoblast
C) Reacive Lymph
3) Caused increased ESR
4) Picture of sickle cell and target cells – asked which disease
5) Picture of poly and Macrocytes – asked which anemia
6) Low WBC, low RBC, low Platelet count – asked which lab test would be useful to add on for anemia
diagnosis
7) Blood was opened for a long period of time, what would happen to pH, pCO2 and pO2
8) Blood with strong cold antibody will – agglutination on smear
9) Picture of agglutination, asked increase in what causes it?
A) Red blood cells
B) Neutrophils
C) Histamines
D) Platelets
10) Blood smear was staining darker blue – reduce pH buffer
11) A control blood smear was made that covered 60% of the slide. The red cells stained pink while white
cells had their nuclei stain dark blue to light blue. The white cells were clustered at the tail end.
A) Accept
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B) Reject – white cells clustered at tail
C) Reject – Red cell color is incorrect
Micro:
1) CSF has gram positive beta hemolytic bacilli catalase+, oxidase-. What Should you do?
A) report out normal flora
B) perform indole and…something else
C) perform motility at room temp and 35
2) Hektoen agar, what color would and A/A bacteria change?
A) Yellow
B) Green
C) Black
D) Clear
3) Showed a picture of mycobacterium that was grown in dark. When left in light for 8 hours, it turned
yellow and has significantly less growth.
4) Cigar shaped gram positive staining organism – candida
5) Had your Fletcher’s media for Leptospira question
6) Gram stain (can’t remember the site, but I think it was some sort of oral lesion) grew a gram positive
cocci and a gram negative bacilli. On the aerobic culture, only the cocci grew. What is the bacteria. –
Bacteroides
7) Bacteria with tapered ends – Fusobacterium
8) Showed 4 TSI slants, asked which one would be for Salmonella
9) How to tell Yersinia pestis from other Yersinia species – Motility test
10) Swarming bacteria, which test should you do next – Indole (for Proteus sp.)
11) A beta hemolytic gram positive cocci is growing on a blood plate. It is catalase positive, coag negative,
oxidase negative, 6.5% NaCl positive.
A) Report as normal flora
B) Repeat the catalase and report out Enterococcus
C) Repeat the coagulase and report out Staph aureus
D) Repeat the oxidase and report out Micrococcus
Others:
1) Doc sends a throat swab for rotavirus – call for clarification
2) Normal DDMR and abnormal FDP, what disease
A) VWD
B) Fibrinolysis
C) DIC
3) Which factor mediates prothrombin to thrombin
4) Ran controls and PT was normal, PTT was abnormal. Replaced controls and got same results. What
should you do next?
A) Change out the Recombiplastin
B) Change out the CaCl
C) Rerun controls
D) Run patient tests
5) 5HIAA – carcinoid tumors
6) Positive RPR but negative FT-ABS. What would cause?
Hey guys! Took the exam yesterday for the second time and PASSED!!! Thank you Sohail for this website
and thanks to everybody who took from their time and shared they’re recalls. Follow Sohail guideline of
study and materials. I strongly recommend the high yield notes specially Micro, LabCE is a super useful
tool, don’t be afraid or discourage of the adaptive simulation, at the beginning I was scoring between 50-
60% by the last week before the ASCP exam I was scoring 75% up. Read and understand every explanation
given even if you got it right. I manage to remember a lot from my exam, I tried to put it in order of subject,
hope it comes in handy!
Bacteriology
1. Bacteria isolated from a wound TSI A/A, oxidase (+), The most likely organism is: Aeromonas
2. Plate cocci in chains. Patient with endocarditis, alpha hemolysis, bile esculin (+), NaCl (no growth). The
most likely organism is: Strep. Galloliticus (bovis)
3. Patient with pharyngitis complicates to glomerulonephritis. The most likely organism is: Strep. Pyogenes
4. Preferred rapid test for Legionella pneumophilia Ag: Ag in urine
5. Bacteria LAP(-), Bile esculin (+), NaCl (growth), PYR(-): Leuconostoc
6. Organism isolated in Hecktoen: TSI K/A, H2S (+), PAD (-), Lysine decarboxylase (-), Urea (+), citrate
(+). What should the technologist do? Report as normal flora
7. Child with walking pneumonia due to Mycoplasma and is prescribed penicillin. 2 weeks later, still sick.
What happened? The microorganism doesn’t have cellular wall
8. Latex agglutination for S. aureus – Protein A and coagulase
9. Child with cat scratch, BGN, catalase (-), oxidase (-), motile. The most likely organism is: Bartonella
henselae
10. Difference between P. aeruginosa and P. putida? Growth on 42C
11. Bacteria grows pink on McConkey, Indol(-), citrate (+), Lysine decarboxylase (-), ONPG (+):
Enterobacter cloacae
Virology
12. Rotavirus specimen: stool
Parasitology
13. Parasite that doesn’t present schizont and trophozoite: P. falciparum
Mycology
14. Test of hair penetration allows to differentiate: T.mentagrophytes/ T. rubrum
15. Patient comes in with lesion on arm, the organism presents delicate hyphae with microconidias:
Sporotrix schenki
16. What are blastoconidias? Something about budding between mother and daughter (check)
20. Patient that physically appears to be pregnant but the HCG is negative. U/A decreased SG and proteins:
trace, why the test result in negative? A. low SG B. False negative because of the protein trace C. There’s no
HCG detectable because it’s produce 6-8 days after conception.
21. CSF for culture, MLS only manages to perform Gram stain in his shift, what should the technologist do?
Incubate at 35C
22. Urinalysis result for a child had tubular renal cells 25-30, granular casts: tubular necrosis
23. Fecal fat methods: extraction and process
Immunology
24. ANA pattern with fluorescing speckled or nucleolar (check every pattern)
25. Pancreas cancer marker: CA 19-9
26. Long term marker of hepatitis that is also in acute infection: Anti-HBc
27. Screening test for HTLV-I (+), HTLV-II (-): Report HTLV-I by Western Blot
28. Patient titles EBV>IgG 1:128, IgM1:10, CMV IgG>1:128, IgM1:38, IgG<1:10: Acute infection with
Toxoplasma
29. HbeAg Abs cutoff 0.700, patient 0.300: indeterminate
30. IgE RIST: measures Total IgE
Blood Bank
54. Patient with DAT (+)
Rh patient Rh control
IS 0 IS 0
AHG + AHG +
58. Whole blood donation stops at 390ml: PRBC (low volume unit)
59. Le(a) Le(b) IS 37 AHG
0 + 1+ 0 0
0 + 1+ 0 0
+ 0 0 +/-2w +/-2w
+ 0 0 +/-2w +/-2w
Glycolipid absorbed from plasma
60. Patient A+, Le (a+b-): has Le(a)
61. Antibody that deteriorates in storage: P1
62. Pregnant woman O-, anti-D, anti-C, anti-I, previously she had anti-Le(a), baby is A+ with DAT (+), anti-
D and anti-C are identified, which blood would you give? O- without C
63. Table. Choose positive controls to test for anti-c and negative control to test anti-Fy(a): C+c+ for the
positive control and Fy(a) for the negative control
64. Detection of ab where 11 tubes resulted negative in AHG, but when added CC 4 of them didn’t
agglutinated. Machine didn’t dispense correctly the saline in the wash
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65. Table. IS 37 AHG CC
SCI 0 0 0 2+
SCII +/- +/- 0 2+
Add 4 drops of serum
69. A panel that anti-Fy(a) was present but can’t rule out anti-E, so the answer to the panel was: anti-Fy(a),
anti-E
70. There was a small case to choose which component is the best to give for the deficiency
71. Which donor should you differ? donor received Hep B immunoglobulin 8 weeks ago
1. PTH = normal, and patient elevated Ca+ may caused by Metastasized cancer
4. what is the purpose of protein C and S? Inactivates F. 5 and F. 8
8. b. QC being deterioration ( QC enzyme is unstable at RT, but no enzyme also shift below 2SD)
12. a. Chylomicrons (turbid and milky serum) also called Postprandial Lipemia
10. ISE measures ionized Ca++, pH dependent
9. b. they are biochemically different
3. Effect of increased Aldosterone enzyme: Na= high, K= low, Hypertension, Conn’s disease. For decrease :
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Na= low, K= High
11. ADH is increased : Diabetes insipidus Na = high, K = low, Glucose =N
7. Antacid overdose, test Magnesium
13. measure pH since needed to know acid-base balance. (Ammonia, BUN, Creatinine all evaluate severe
liver disease, kidney failure)
5. affect pH if ionized Ca++ sit out
1) B is the correct answer choice. This concept will be on your exam. Know it well because these are
guaranteed points. Sensitivity refers to the percentage of true positives who are correctly identified as being
positive. Specificity refers to the percentage of true negatives who are correctly identified as negative. In
theory, you’d want a test to be 100% sensitive and 100% specific. In reality, this is very difficult to achieve.
For example, an HIV test that is extremely sensitive (near 100%) will identify every individual who really
has HIV but it may also falsely identify many people as having HIV when they don’t really have it (the
sensitivity is high but specificity is low). On the other hand, a very specific test will not falsely identify
anyone as having HIV but it will also fail to identify some who do have it.
So for this question, you can clearly see that Procedure 2 is more sensitive than Procedure 1 – this eliminates
choices A & C. You can also see that Procedure 1 is more specific than Procedure 2 so you can eliminate
choice D. You are left with choice B which is clearly true.
2. TP/TP+FN = ?
a. sensitivity
b. specificity
c. precision
d. variance
2) A is the correct answer. The equation is the formula for calculating sensitivity. Sensitivity = Number of
True Positives/(Number of True Positives + Number of False Negatives). It is important that you
differentiate sensitivity from specificity. Specificity = Number of True Negatives/(Number of True
Negatives + Number of False Positives)
3) The correct answer is A. The presence of WBCs and nitrites in urine is a classical indication of a bacterial
infection of the urinary tract (pyelonephritis). The nitrites are a result of gram negative bacteria reducing
4. Why is albumin the first protein to be detected in tests for renal failure?
a. its molecular size is largest
b. its molecular size is smallest
c. it is very negatively charged
4) The correct answer is B. In healthy folks, the kidneys prevent albumin and other proteins from entering
the urine as waste. If the kidneys are damaged however, it will allow proteins to pass into the urine. The first
type of protein to appear in urine is albumin as its molecular size is smaller than most other proteins.
5) The correct answer is C. Cortisol counteracts insulin. It will increase levels of glucose in blood (Ilyanok,
N).
Back Type
Patient serum vs reagent A cells demonstrate a reaction strength of 3+
Patient serum vs reagent B cells demonstrate a reaction strength of 0
6) The correct answer is C. The front type suggests that the patient is type AB but the back type suggests he
is type B. This is considered an ABO discrepancy. The explanation is that this person is most likely A2B
and thus producing anti-A1. Approximately 20% of people who are type A are type A2 while 80% are type
A1. (Epps-Clarke, L)
8) The correct answer is B. A key identifying characteristic for Eikenella corrodens is the production of a
bleach-like odor. It is a gram negative bacteria that also causes pitting on agar plates.
9. Presence of rheumatoid factor in blood may result in false positives for what test?
a. VDRL
b. FT-ABS
9) The correct answer is A. The presence of rheumatoid factor in the blood may result in false positive
results with the VDRL test. The VDRL test is a nonspecific serological screening test for syphilis – a variety
of factors may cause it to give you a false positive result. These include rheumatic fever, some drugs,
pregnancy and leprosy. On the other hand, FT-ABS is a test specific for treponema pallidum as it detects
antibodies against T. pallidum.
10. Disease associated with the following results? Elevated TSH; Elevated T3; Elevated free T4
a. hypothyroidism
b. hyperthyroidism
c. pituitary tumor
10) The correct answer is C. Since TSH, T3 and T4 are all elevated, this suggests a pituitary tumor. The
tumor is causing production of excess TSH, which is in turn causing elevated production of T3 and T4.
Answer choice A is wrong because hypothyroidism would present with low T3 & T4 and high TSH. Answer
choice B is wrong as hyperthyroidism would present with high T3 & T4 and low TSH.
11. If excess PTH is released, what would you find in elevated amounts in serum?
a. Calcium
b. Potassium
11) The correct answer is A, because PTH causes an elevation of calcium in the blood. This happens in
several ways; including bone resorption (bone breakdown which releases calcium into blood), and increased
calcium uptake by the kidneys and intestines (so less is lost by your body). Try to understand the following
diagram concerning calcium homeostasis as it’s likely to account for 1 or more questions on your exam.
12. Mucoid, pink colonies on plate; produces gas; indole (+). On TSI tube you see yellow on the slant and
yellow in the deep. What organism is this?
a. Salmonella
b. E. coli
c. Klebsiella pneumonia
d. Klebsiella oxytoca
13. PAD (+); indole (+); Organism stains gram negative. What is it?
a. P. vulgaris
b. P. mirabilis
13) The correct answer is A. Follow the chart for gram negative bacilli. What organism is PAD + and Indole
+? That would be Proteus vulgaris. For practical purposes (and by extension for the exam), it’s important to
know that P. vulgaris is Indole positive and P. mirabilis is Indole negative. This was on the exam because it
is practical knowledge.
14. You see a curved gram negative bacilli. It was cultured from the GI tract of a person with ulcers. What
test would you do next to confirm its identity?
a. test for Urease
b. culture the organism in agar
c. H2S test
14) The correct answer is A. If you only know a few things about helicobacter pylori, you should know this:
It is curved, can infect the GI tract, and the urease it produces may cause ulcers.
15. Enzyme controls run on a machine give results around -3 standard deviations. Samples run on the same
machine give results of less than 1 standard deviation. What could be the problem?
a. controls are recently expired
b. controls were left at room temp for several days
15) The more likely answer is B. In this case, there is clearly a major problem with the controls. As you
probably know, enzymes are very sensitive to temperature. While most enzymes work more rapidly at
higher temperatures, they will also be denatured by temperatures far beyond their acceptable range, losing
much of their functionality. Choice A is incorrect because the control wouldn’t start giving results this
erroneous (being off by 3 standard deviations is pretty bad!) just because it recently expired.
16) The correct answer is D. You are PRETTY SURE that the person has EITHER HIV-1 or HIV-2 b/c the
combo ELISA test tells you so. This test is a cheap, catch-all test so it’s run first. However, this test can give
you false positives and you don’t want to go around telling someone they have this disease unless you’re
sure they have it. Thus, a more expensive, time consuming and sure confirmation for the ELISA test is a
Western Blot. This test is specific so it can differentiate btwn HIV-1 and HIV-2. Since the Western Blot for
HIV-1 came back as inconclusive, there’s probably a good chance that the ELISA test originally detected
HIV-2. Thus you would run a Western Blot for HIV-2 in order to confirm.
17) The correct answer is C. PCR is an artificial process generating multiple copies of a particular DNA
sequence. The first step involves denaturation of the bonds between the two complementary strands so they
separate (unzip) from each other; Next, short DNA primers attach (anneal) to one of the separated DNA
strands; Finally, DNA Polymerase extends the DNA along the primer, transcribing a new strand of DNA
based on the mirror image strand opposite the primer.
18) The correct answer is A. RAST is a blood test used to determine specific IgE antibodies to known
antigens.
19. After collecting a blood sample in an EDTA tube for CBC, you find that the Hematocrit is very high
(67%). What should you do next?
a. collect blood again, but use less sodium citrate in the tube
b. collect blood in heparin
c. report these results
19) The correct answer is C. There may be several reasons for a high hematocrit – including the obvious
possibility that this is a newborn who demonstrate a normal hematocrit range of 55to 68%. Another likely
reason for a high hematocrit is dehydration – the individual just happens to have less fluid in the body. Less
frequent causes include Polycythemia Vera or high hematocrit due to blood doping, a favorite of several
infamous athletes including Lance Armstrong. Note that blood doping with EPO is a very bad idea because
20. When you conduct a procedure using fluorescence, it’s important to protect yourself from the:
a. cover light
b. emitted light
c. exciting light
20) The correct answer is C – the exciting light is the dangerous, high energy light produced by the machine.
Answer choice B refers to the lower energy light produced when excited electrons (previously excited to
higher energy levels by the machine) fall back to lower energy levels. The cover light is just regular light
helping you see what’s happening.
21. Blood was collected on Nov 1. Blood was then frozen in glycerol on Nov 5. What should the expiration
date read?
a. Nov 1; 1 year from now
b. Nov 5; 1 year from now
c. Nov 1; 10 years from now
d. Nov 5, 10 years from now
21) The correct answer is C. Blood is sometimes frozen in order to preserve rare types. Glycerol is used in
the freezing process. Once frozen, the expiration date of the blood is extended to 10 years from the date of
phlebotomy. If the blood is needed, it is defrosted and the new expiration time becomes only 24 hours from
the time it is defrosted (Polina Gurevich).
As an aside, we recently had a patient with anti-U antibody. We needed to give this person blood from a
donor who is negative for U antigen. Unfortunately, only 0.01% of the population is negative for U antigen.
We were able to find this blood in frozen/glycerolized form at the New York Blood Center. We had to have
a good idea of what time the patient would need to receive the blood though. That’s b/c once defrosted, the
blood is only good for 24 hours before it expires.
22. A person was successfully treated for syphilis 12 years ago. However, he has just come in again, worried
about having been re-infected. What would you look for in his blood?
a. TP-A
b. VDRL
22) The correct answer choice is B. To determine if this patient has been re-infected you would have to
perform a VDRL test. Answer choice A is incorrect because a TPA test may remain active for the life of the
patient so it is not useful in determining reinfection or treatment.
23. A patient demonstrates a positive antibody screen. You suspect either Jka, K or c antibodies. You know
from a previous history that this patient has Jka antigen on their red cells. You then react the patients serum
23) D is the correct answer choice. Use the process of elimination. I strongly urge you try to understand the
reasoning here because it is a perfect example of a secondary level question. As a secondary level question
you will first make one determination and then use that determination to come to a final conclusion. Reread
this question carefully at the end to be sure you’re actually answering the question. First, the question tells
you that the patient has Jka antigen on his cells – you don’t even need to worry about this because none of
the answer choices address Jka! Next, we rule out the possibility of K antibody because testing of the
patients serum against cells positive for the K antigen demonstrated a reaction strength of zero; thus the
patient is not producing anti-K antibody – However, the question is not asking you to determine what
antibody the patient is producing! It’s asking you to go further and determine the antigenic makeup of the
patients red cells – the fact that the patient is not producing anti-K antibody could mean either of two things
with regard to whether the patient has K antigen on his cells: (1) the patient is antigenically positive for K so
that’s why he’s not producing antibody against his own cells or (2) the patient is antigenically negative for K
but has never been exposed to K antigen through a foreign blood transfusion so his body has never been
prompted into producing anti-K antibody. So you essentially cannot confirm the presence or absence of K
antigen on the patients red cells. Finally, the patients serum reacted strongly against cells with c antigen on
them and thus he is definitely producing anti-c antibody – if he produces anti-c antibody then we can rule
out the presence of c antigen on his red cells because he would not produce an antibody against his own
cells!
24. Urine protein chemistry dipstick (Reagent strip) detected no proteins but sulfosalicylic acid (SSA) test
did detect proteins. Why?
a. reagent strip was expired
b. Bence-Jones proteins in urine
24) The correct answer choice is B. Unlike the urine protein chemistry dipstick (Reagent strip) which only
detects albumin, the SSA test detects albumin as well as other proteins like Bence-Jones proteins.
25. I was shown a picture of what I believe were several immature granulocytes in a peripheral blood smear.
What stain should you use next to figure out this persons problem?
a. specific esterase
b. non specific esterase
c. LAP
25) This question cannot be answered because I don’t have a picture of the immature granulocyte presented.
The picture of the granulocyte itself was the clue to which type of stain ought to be used. I only included the
wording of this question to show you the types of questions you may encounter. You may already be aware
that special leukemia stains are used to help distinguish one type of cell from another. For example,
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leukocyte specific esterase identifies granulocytes (which show red granules) while leukocyte nonspecific
esterase identifies monocytes and megakaryocytes (which show black granules).
26. Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH) would result in what in blood?
a. excess potassium
b. excess sodium
c. excess non-serum water (?something like that?)
d. deficient potassium
e. deficient sodium
26) The correct answer is E – deficient sodium (aka hyponatremia). SIADH is a disease characterized by
release of excess ADH (antidiuretic hormone) from the posterior pituitary. Anti (against) diuresis (urine
production) means that you won’t be urinating as much so body fluid levels increase. This will dilute the
concentration of sodium in your body.
27) The correct answer is B. Fiber strands (commonly fibers from diapers) resemble hyaline casts and may
be mistaken for such.
28) The correct answer is B. Troponins are contractile proteins that regulate muscle contraction along with
tropomyosin and calcium. Recall that troponin levels in blood may be used to determine if someone has
suffered a cardiac injury.
29. HBa1c levels cannot always be used to monitor glucose levels in conditions such as:
a. sickle cell disease
b. HIV
c. Tuberculosis
29) The correct answer is A – Hba1c levels cannot be used to monitor blood glucose levels in patients with
sickle cell disease. As you may know, sugars tend to attach to RBCs over time. The HBa1c test measures
this degree of glycation of RBCs (if you have more sugars in blood you’ll have more sugar attaching to the
RBCs over time). Any disorder that causes RBCs to die prematurely (sickle cell disease, G6PD deficiency,
etc) will result in an underestimation of the Hba1c levels b/c the old, glycated cells deformed and died, being
replaced by newer cells which are not very glycated. Thus, the test is not valid in patients with sickle cell
disease.
Accuracy
Precision
Standard Deviation
Sensitivity
Specificity
Delta Check
Know about Lab Safety like Fire safety, Radiation sign, Bio Hazard sign, Fire extinguisher classes,
Biological safety Cabinets, Accrediated Agencies.
KNow just the principles of Instrumentation, All you need to know the basic idea about instrument, just 2-3
lines—> Spectrotophotometry(stary light and filetr?)= for example this method measures light in a Narrow
Wavelength Range.
Fluorometry
Turbidimetry
osmometry
chromatography
Electrophoresisi
Potientiometry
coulometry
Amperometry
Available: A- =1unit
A = 6units
O- = 5 or something
a) transfuse A units
b) transfuse O negative
C) don’t remember more options
The Rh typing doesn’t matter when transfusing FFP units because there aren’t any RBCs in FFP so you can
transfuse A- or A+ or AB+ or AB-
(3)What is the reason for this discrepancy or What would you do to resolve this discrepancy?
(4) In forward, reverse reaction… reaction in forward, but no reaction in reverse, what will do you?
A. Incubate at room temp for 15-20 minutes. The reverse reaction is usually due some immunodepressed
event and the reactions will reveal.
Comment:
The reverse typing antibodies, i.e. anti-A and anti-B and anti-A,B contain IgM as well as IgG antibodies.
IgM antibodies are enhanced after room temperature and 4C incubation so incubation at room temp or 4C
will enhance and usually reveal these antibodies.
(5)You suspect someone might have Jka, K and c antigens on their red cells. You figure out that they don’t
have Jka. You also test their serum and see the following:
Answer: D is the correct answer.The fact that the patient hasn’t made anti-K doesn’t tell you if they are
positive or negative. They could be negative for K antigen and never make anti-K. The only thing that you
know if that their blood is reacting with c antigen and most likely they made anti-c because they are c
antigen negative.
(6)What is RHOGAM, when are you going to give it and what will it do to the patient?
In a nut shell it’s an injection containing passively acquired anti-D. It is given to D negative mothers during
28 weeks of pregnancy and up to 72 hours after delivery to prevent the formation of actively acquired anti-D
from a baby that’s D positive.
(7)In an emergency, what blood type of blood would you give if the red cells are needed or plasma is
required and the blood type is unknown?
In emergency situation when there is no time to perform proper tests give O- RBCs and AB FFP. These are
the universal blood type for RBCs and plasma products.
(8)Would you phenotype a patient who had been transfused within the last 3 months?
No because you may get mixed field typing which is the patient’s blood and transfused blood and may get
false results.
a.Parental is rule out b.Parental cannot rule out (answer) c.Child 1 can rule out d. Child 2 can rule out
your comment: Based on this information you can’t not rule out the father. Do you know how to do a
punnet square? If you do a square, you can see how this the mother can be a BB or BO and the father is a
AB can have babies which is A, B, AB and O when the mother is BO but when the mother is BB the babies
can only be B or AB.
a. cDE CDE
b. Cde CdE
c. Cde Cde
d. eDe CDe
Answer and Comment: anti-f reacts with RBCs that are c+e on the same haplotype. So will not react with
RBCs that are cDE or CDE or CDe or CdE or Cde or cdE but only with cDe or cde. Does this make sense?
(12)The same antibody was found in 3 different patients. The results of testing are listed below. Which
antibody is most likely to be present?
Patient 1 0 2+ 0
Patient 2 2+ 0 0
Patient 3 0 0 2+
a. Anti – Jka
b. Anti- K
c. Anti- M
d. Anti- Leb
Answer and comment: You want to chose a antibody that is known to commonly react at all phases and that
is common enough where it’s most likely to be found in 3 different patients. The likely answer is anti-M
(13)Which of the following is detected primarily in the antiglobulin phase of the crossmatch:
b. Anti- M
c. Anti- B
d. Anti- P1
Anti-M, B, P1- are typically IgM and may agglutinate saline suspended cells at room temperature.
Comment: Anti-Fya contains mainly IgG and these are more likely to react in the antiglobulin phase of
testing.
(14) The most common cold agglutinin? Answer: Anti-I should be the correct answer
a. I
b. P1
c. M
You run a select cell panel to rule in and rule out antibodies
3) What Test to screen Sickle cell disease? Do remember the full name of the test.
Solubility Test, Sodium Dithionate
AST and ALT= both ends with T = HeapaTTTitis= focus on T on hepatitis= so its Acuter Viral Hepatitis
GGT and Alp= PluGGed= focus on P and G= means Bile Obstruction(plugged)
Muscle =S=ASt, C=Ck, L=LD so AST, CK and LD in mucular dystrophy.
I Am Peter Pan with Lips= Amylase and Lipase in Pancreatis
Respiratory= R= Reverse= ph high Co2 low vise versa
Metabolic = MD= direct = in this case HCO3 and Ph= Ph high Hco3 high
12) Citrobacter vs Salmonella Reaction. organism grows on Mac Conkey but its colorless , has all reaction
conisistent with Citrobacter. Whats the issue? ANswer= Problem with Agar Plate, Run a Control, because
Citrobacter a slow Lactose Fermenter will be turning agar into Pinkish color not white.
13)RhIg= Rhogam , calculate how many vials needed for 50 cells Fetal Blood? (Whole Blood)
Answer = 50/30= 1.6 round to 2 and add 1= 3 vials needed.
Incase of RBC just divide by 15 not 30 and then round off and add 1 to final answer.
18)Another Panel shows 2 antibodies which could not be rules out, but the option only shows Ant-jka, Anti
Jka and k, Anti k
I could not rule out Anti Jka and k so thats the answer both of them.
23) When do you use washed Redcells and when do you use Leukocyte Reduced Cells?
24)Cystic fibrosisi caused by which organism?
25)Which Neiserria Species is increasingly resistant to Penicillin?= N Gonorrohea.
26)Whats the reason on not doing Zinc protoporphyrin (ZPP) for Lead Poisoning on Kids ? Page # 115 Q-
274, but it does not give reason.
Normally Kids are tested for whole Blood Lead not ZPP or EPP which are for adults , the exact reason look
it up on Internet.I think I got it wrong.
27) Cociane Metabolized to?
28)Procainamide metobilite = NAPA N Acet procanimide.
BOC Page # 113 Just do from 256 to 274 you will see all this type of Questions. Metabolites type QUestion.
29) Know Antiepileptic Drug, Manic Depressant Drug, and Bronchial Passage relaxant drugs. AGain you
will find it on page 114.
30)TSH for ?= distinguish primary and secondary Hyperthyroidism or Hypothyroidism.
31)TSH is low in Kid, what Test you going to do to confirm for hyperthyroidism? T3 or Free T4?
32) Exposure to AIr for Blood Gas? pH and O2 high and Co2 and PCO2 low
33)
Picture of RBC cast= Glomerulonephritis. See Page 394 Q-104.
34)page 405 Review Body Fluid From Question # 166 to 216 Memorise them by heart LoL, Instead of
confusing yourself from wrong Questions Posted on Indeed.
So focus on Questions from Body Fluid such as # 167 Turbid CSF=WBC and Bacteria, Incase of Synovial
Fluid why is cloudy?= Crystals or WBC, Q # 173 in regular case strong birefringent is monosodium urate
but when compensated polarised filter used its opposite, in this case Positive Birefringent will be Calcium
Pyro which Blue when parallel.
Q # 175 Page # 407 on BOC…what is prinicpal Mucin?
Q # 179 I explained alreasdy MSU is negative Birefringent in case of Compensator, Know exudate Vs
Transudate, Cystic Fibrosis, Q #187, 205, 206, PSA tumor Marker? Fecal Fat Test?
Synovial Fluid = small clot= Inflammation. Q # 208 —>exact same Question on ASCP.
So from this Few Questions I got 5 on Body Fluid.
Q34) Do all the Questions on Fungi from BOC only. No need to spend extra time on this useless thing. I got
5 and I hate Mycology but 10 minutes review on BOC Book for the first time in life and I believe its my last
time too just before entering the exam center saved me. I got Question about cigar shaped –> check on BOC,
its just 3 pages on Fungi., Mucor= Rhizoid, Malasala fur fur LoL no idea how to pronounce this shit. u will
find it on BOC again.
Page 147 of 287
Q35)DOn’t spend time on Mycobacterium I got Zero Questions.
Q. Why is albumin the first protein to be detected in tests for renal failure?
—————————————————————————————-
Corr wbc count with 50 cells ( I changed it to wbc X 50 divided by (nRbcs + 100),
cocaine metabolite,
moth ball intoxication ( i guessed basophilic stippling still cant find it)
moth ball intoxication will see what in RBC ?
(Naphthalene is the main chemical compound used in moth balls):”The most common toxic effect observed
in the laboratory following oral ingestion or inhalation of naphthalene is hemolytic anemia, evidenced by a
rapid decrease in hemoglobin and hematocrit levels, an elevated reticulocyte count and serum bilirubin level,
and the presence of Heinz bodies on a peripheral blood smear.”
know which anemias are micro/macro/hypo/hyper, I calculated rbc indices to rule out answers.
density of proteins in decreasing to ascending order I dunno what IDL is but I put it in between VLDL and
LDL.
Normal total CK but increase in troponin in what? (got it down to unstable angina or acute M.I)
urine from catheter rapid analysis only need to setup which two plates for micro?
what stain to see lipid? i said oil red o only one that made sense
picture of dysmorphic rbcs and asked why (got it down to oxidizing drugs or antimalarial drug)
—-> Very important—> one said strep b was neg on CAMP test w/ s. aureus, do what next (do biochem
rxns for b or run CAMP with beta lysin s. aureus I chose this)
at end of protein electro which is closest to the cathode (gamma and beta)
asked about a csf electrophoresis showing anodal band to albumin (picked normal results)
had 2 questions, one which increases/or falsley inc hgA1c and what decreased A1c= increases in HgS and
iron defiecency
what hepatis ag/ab will make sure vaccination has occured = Ag s= active, Ag E=infectious Antibody S=
Immune.
morganella vs providencia
PCR Steps?
measure HDL?
baby w RH+ O mom w Rh- O baby need transfusion what blood should give?
anion Gap increase indicate what disease = Lactic acidosis, Diabetic ketoacidosis, Metabolic acidosis.
blood gas use what tube/synringe to transport = Heparin anticoag and ice and tested ASAP
CNS smear what condition = see BOC Lab determination for Hematology.
proteus,klebsiella rxn
how many grams are needed to make a 3% solution of NaCL. Calculations= review some common Maths.
What would cause a false positive for protein on a UA test strip= radiographic Dye
What do you do if you see your coworker …gosh I can’t remember what my coworker was doing but it was
a silly question. I chose tell my supervisor?
———————————————————————————-
2) PAS stain negative and sudden black stain positive what disease.
8) What is standard practice. A) student read parasite slide that instructor gave them B) student
memorize coag cascade and gave exam C) student fix instrument after reading operator manual.
13) Synovial fluid collected in anticoagulant tube, what do you use to dilute the specimen?
16) ANA Picture
17) Rh- mother has increase titer of anti-D. After delivery, the DAT is strongly (+) but the baby is Rh-
a) inadequate washing
b) added monoclonal anti-D sera instead of anti globulin (or vise versa)
Available: A- =1unit
A = 6units
O- = 15 or something
a) transfuse A units
b) transfuse 15 O negative
19) Cryo = 80ul
20) Bhcg is negative and patient think she is pregnant, but all test are negative.
21) 17- ketosteriod
22) Disease associated with the following results? Elevated TSH; Elevated T3; Elevated free T4
27) If rbc to blue what would u do? Decrese PH, increase ph of buffer.
28) Blood was collected on Nov 1. Blood was then frozen in glycerol on Nov 5. What should the expiration
date read?
a.waxy cast
b.hyaline cast
c.wbc cast
32) Instrument gave Platelet only 30 what would you see per field under microscope? 3-10, 10-15
something like that.
A. Jka
B. E
c. Fya
D. k
A. Is C
34) Q. Which of the following antigens gives enhanced reactions with its corresponding antibody following
treatment of the red cells with proteolytic enzymes?
A. Fya
B. E
C. S
Page 152 of 287
D. M
36) Autoclave temperature.
38) If in emergency what kind a blood would you give? autologus, direct, homologous something like that.
__________________________________________________________________________
3. Congenital afibrinogenemia
4. Glanzmann’s thrombasthenia
6.
1. Choriocarcinoma
2. Testicular Cancer
3. Pancreatic (answer)
4. Nonseminomatous
5. If the protein elevation from B1B2 and gamma are to merge together, what
immunoglobulin would I indicate?
1. IgM
3. IgD
4. IgE
1. What is RHOGAM, when are you going to give it and what will it do to the patient?
1. In an emergency, what blood type of blood would you give if the red cells are needed or plasma is
required and the blood type is unknown?
1. Would you phenotype a patient who had been transfused within the last 3 months?
1. Potassium is high but the blood sample is not hemolyzed, patient does not show symptoms what do
you think happened?
Page 153 of 287
1. Control was high even after you repeat it, what’s the next step that you would do?
1. RBC storage time – Storage temperature 1-6 degrees Celsius, shelf life 35days CPDA-1.
42days AS-1
2. Platelets storage time – Storage 20 – 24 degrees Celsius shelf life 5 days with agitation
3. Cryoprecipitate storage time – shelf life12 monts, after thawing transfuse within 6 hours
4. FFP storage time- Shelf life 12 months, after thawing, tansfuse within 24 hours.
Ans. Beta zon- total hemolysis, the colony or bacteria on Red blood Agar plate lyses the RBCs, therefore
surrounding of the colony appear as clear or transparent
Which of the following index will be exchanged if moved out the buffy coat in Lipemia specimen? (Lipemia
can falsely elevate ALT and AST. Additionally, it can indicate that the patient did not adequately fast for 12-
18 hours before having the specimen collected. In this situation, glucose and triglycerides will be elevated.)
1. Triclycerides
2. HDL (answer)
3. LDL or VLDL
4. CM
5. Chlolesterol
50% Ca is free + 40 % + bind to protein + 10 % bind to anion (phosphate etc.) = 100% total Ca
1. WBC: 22.0 could see dohle body, toxic granules. According to this case which is correc?
1. Bacterial infection
2. Vital infection
2. Cde CdE
3. Cde Cde
4. eDe CDe
5. Which product we should use when the patient has fever when transfusion the blood?
2. Irradiated RBC
3. Wash RBC
1. Blood culture in aerobic and an anaerobic bottle are negative, but in gram stain smear shows gram
positive bacteria. What should you do next?
1. After 2 days of blood culture, technician found gram positive cocci, what should you do next?
1. Crystals
2. Protein (answer)
3. immunoglobulin
4. Mother Rh(-), but DAT(+) her baby is Rh (-). What is the reason for discrepancy?
1. Mother B Rh(-), Father AB Rh (+). Child 1 A Rh(-) Child 2 B Rh (+). Which is correct
5. Produce #1 detected 50/100 true positive and 100/100 true negative. Produce 2# detected
80/100 true positive and 70/100 true negative
5. TP/TP +FN =?
1. Sensitivity
2. Specificity
3. Precision
4. Variance
5. What might the following indicate? Urine: RBCS, WBCs, nitrite, bacteria.
1. Why is albumin the first protein to be detected in tests for renal failure?
4. Cortisol excess will result in…. ( An excess ofcortisol can also lead to a decrease in insulin)
1. What is the reason for this discrepancy or what would you do to resolve the discrepancy.
1. This spiral- form organism is seen in urine and cultured on Fletcher’s media
3. Presence of rheumatoid factor in blood may result in false positive for what test?
Ans. VDRL – The VDRL test is a screening test for syphilis. It measures substances, called antibodies that
your body may produce if you have come in contact with the bacteria that cause syphilis. This bacteria is
called Treponema pallidum.
1. 36. Diseases associated with the following results? Elevated TSH; Elevated T3; Elevated free T4
1. a. hypothyroidism – is disorder in which the parathyroid glands in the neck do not
produce enough parathyroid hormone (PTH).
2. b. Hyperthyroidism – means your thyroid makes too much thyroid hormone. Secretes
excessive amounts of the free (not protein bound, and circulating in the blood thyroid
hormones, triiodothyronine (T3) and/or thyroxine (T4) (ANSWER)
1. If excess parathyroid hormone (PTH) is being released, what would you find in elevated amount of
serum?
1. Calcium – High levels of PTH cause serum calcium levels to increase and serum phosphate
levels to fall.
2. Potassium
1. Mucoid, pink colonies on plate; produces gas; indole (+). On TSI tube you see yellow on the slant
and yellow in the deep. What organism is this? Indole positive test- Indole positive test- appearance
of pink layer on top (E.g. Escherichia Coli)
2. Salmonella
3. E.coli
6. PAD (+); indole (+); organism stain gram negative. What is it?
3. You see curved gram negative bacilli (rod shape). It was cultured from the GI tract of a
person with ulcers. What test would you do next to confirm its identity?
Ans. Urease.
1. Enzymes controls run on a machine give results around -3 standard deviations. Samples run on the
same machine give results less than 1 SD. What could be the problem?
3. HIV- 1 and HIV-2 combination ELISA test is positive in a patient with symptoms of immune
deficiency. Western blot was inconclusive for HIV-1. What do you do next? (Enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay is a test that uses antibodies and color change to identify a substance)
3. Do HIV- 2 ELISA
2. Annealing, denaturation
Answer. IgE to particular antigen. RAST- is a blood test used to determine what substance a person is
allergic to.
1. 45. After collecting blood sample in an EDTA tube you find that the hematocrite is very high
(67%) What would you do?
1. a. Collect blood again, but use less sodium citrate
4. 46. When you conduct a procedure using fluorescence it is important to protect yourself
from the :
4. 47. Blood was collected on November 1. Blood was frozen in glycerol on November
5t. What should the expiration date read?
5. 48. A person was successfully treated for syphilis 12 years ago. However he
has just come in again worried about having been reinfected. What would you
look for in he blood?
3. 49. You suspect someone might have JKa, K ,and C antigen on their
red cells. You figure out that they don’t have Jka. You also test their
serum and see the following. What would you conclude?
1. a. Confirm patient as aving K and C antigen on their red cells
2. b. Rule out c and confirm K on their red cells (answer)
4. d. Rule out C but cannot confirm the presence or absence of K.
5. Reagent strip detected no proteins but sulfosalicylic acid test (is used in urine tests to determine
urine protein content) did. Why?
2. Bence Jones protein in urine (Bence Jones proteins are a part of regular antibodies, called
light chain)
1. Western blot was run for HIV testing and the result as indeterminate. What should you do next?
1. Rune again
2. Do ELISA
Answer. Decrease heptoglobin – Haptoglobin is an acute-phase reactant whose principal clinical utility is in
defining conditions of hemolysis.
1. A postpartum female with a history of transfusion test positive for Anti- D. What is your next step?
5. The same antibody was found in 3 different patients. The results of testing are listed below.
Which antibody is most likely to be present?
1. Anti – Jka
2. Anti- K
3. Anti- M
4. Anti- Leb
1. Which of the following antigens gives enhanced reactions with its corresponding antibody following
treatment of the red cell with proteolytic enzymes?
1. Fya
2. E (answer)
3. S
4. M
1. JKa
2. E
3. Fya (answer)
4. K
5. Reagent strip detect no protein but sulfosalicylic acid test did. Why?
1. Eosinophilia (most commonly seen as a result of allergic reaction, medication reaction, parasitic
infection) is commonly found in which of the following disorder(s):
1. Liver
2. Placenta
3. Intestine
4. Brain
5. Which of the following is detected primarily in the antiglobulin phase of the crossmatch:
2. Anti- M
3. Anti- B
4. Anti- P1
Anti-M, B, P1- are typically IgM and may agglutinate saline suspended cells at room temperature.
2. What is the BNP test? A brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) test measures the amount of the
BNP hormone in your blood. BNP is made by your heart and shows how well your heart is working.
Normally, only a low amount of BNP is found in your blood
1. I
2. P1
3. M
Answer: blood needs to be collected and immediately chilled, separated within one hour
Answer: the adding of acetic acid to normal synovial fluid, which causes clot formation The compactness of
the clot and the clarity of the supernatant fluid are the criteria on which the result is based.
————————————————————————————————
Part -2
Page 162 of 287
Q-Effects of caffeine (coffee) on conjugated and unconjugated bilirubin?
A. The Jendrassik and Grof reaction uses a diazo reagent with caffeine as an accelerator.
Q. Many gram neg bacilli in the urine and nitrite is negative, why?
A. The bacteria that is present is not a nitrate-reducer/ and The urine was in the bladder for an insufficient
amount of time for nitrate to be reduced to nitrite
Q.-Muscle tremor(?), increased Na, decreased K in the body, what hormone causes that? (ADH or
Aldosterone?)
A. Answer is Aldosterone. This hormone causes inc. blood pressure, retention of Na+, and excretion of
K+. ADH increase leads to increase water retention via distal tubules and secretion of Na+
Q.Cryoprecipitated AHF products was thawed/prepared at 10 am, patient has X-ray at 2 pm (takes about few
hours), what will you do with the product? Proper storage is at room temp, the expiration is 6 hours, and 4
hours if pooled.
A. Anion gap is Na+K – (Cl+HCO3). Metbolic alkalosis means high hco3, this would decrease the anion
gap. Metabolic acidosis means decreased hco3, which would increase the anion gap.
A.No, the ACETEST reaction, sodium nitroprusside, does not react with beta-hydroxybutyrate
Q.You see something gram negative under the microscope. You culture it and it gives off a bleach like odor.
What is it
Q: Reagent strip detected no protein but sulfosalicylic acid test did. WHy?
A. Reagent strip detects albumin, whereas SSA detects proteins in general. So, answer is bence jones
proteins caused reaction with SSA test.
a.waxy cast
b.hyaline cast
Page 163 of 287
c.wbc cast
A) Optochin disk
B) Bacitracin test
C) CAMP test
D) Coagulase test
A. answer is C, Hippurate hydrolysis and CAMP test confirm strep group B, S. agalactiae.
Q. A CSF culture from a 1 year old child shows no growth on blood agar or MacConkey, and a few small,
smooth, transparent colonies on chocolate agar. A gram stain reveals tiny pleomorphic gram-negative rods.
the technologist set up XV STRIPS and a rabbit blood agar. The next day, he observes growth between the
X and V strips and no hemolysis on the rabbit agar plate. What should be reported.
A. Jka
B. E
c. Fya
D. k
A. Is C
Q. Which of the following antigens gives enhanced reactions with its corresponding antibody following
treatment of the red cells with proteolytic enzymes?
A. Fya
B. E
C. S
D. M
A. B, procedure 2 is more sensitive, detection of disease. The other are entirely wrong or partly wrong.
Q. TP/TP+FN = ?
a. sensitivity
b. specificity
c. precision
d. variance
a. pyelonephritis
b. glomerulonephritis
c. nephrotic syndrome
d. renal calculi
A. Answer A is correct.
Q. Why is albumin the first protein to be detected in tests for renal failure?
A. B is correct. These are not good choices because its really damage to the reabsorption process that
allows albumin to pass, including other proteins. Since Albumin is a very low molecular weight protein,
answer B is the right choice. C, is opposite, because of Albumin’s very negative charge, it does not end up
in urine.
a. hypernatremia
b. hypokalemia
Q.. What is the reason for this discrepancy or What would you do to resolve this discrepancy?
a. Borrelia
b. Leptospira
note: I had this question on the exam so I will update this one.
A. B, Leptospira
a. Actinobacillus
b. Eikenella
A. B, Eikenella
Q. Presence of rheumatoid factor in blood may result in false positives for what test?
a. VDRL
A. VDRL and RPR, because both have same false positives. EBV infection, pregnancy and other
autoimmune disorders.
Q. Disease associated with the following results? Elevated TSH; Elevated T3; Elevated free T4
a. hypoparathyroidism
b. hyperparathyroidism
c. pituitary tumor
A. C is the correct choice. I think answer choices A and B were meant to be hypo and hyper thyroidism.
Hypothyroidism presents with increased TSH and decreased T4 and T3. Hyperthyroidism presents with
decreased TSH and increased T4 and T3. Secondary hyperthyroidism presents with increased TSH, T4 and
T3. Secondary hypothyroidism presents with decreased presents with decreased TSH, T4 and T3.
Q. If excess PTH is being released, what would you find in elevated amounts in serum?
a. Calcium
b. Potassium
Page 166 of 287
A.. PTH regulates calcium release from bones, and an excess of PTH would lead to increase calcium and
decreased phosphorous.
Q. Mucoid, pink colonies on plate; produces gas; indole (+). On TSI tube you see yellow on the slant and
yellow in the deep. What organism is this?
a. Salmonella
b. E. coli
c. Klebsiella pneumonia
d. Klebsiella oxytoca
A. B is correct choice. E. coli is indole, lactose positive, and presents A/A, G on TSI. Salmonella is indole
lactose negative and presents with Alk/A, H2S+ TSI. Klesbsiella has the same TSI as E. coli but is indole
negative.
Q. PAD (+); indole (+); organism stains gram negative. What is it?
a. P. vulgaris
b. P. mirabilis
Q. You see a curved gram negative bacilli. It was cultured from the GI tract of a person with ulcers. What
test would you do next to confirm its identity?
a. Urease.
Q. Enzyme controls run on a machine give results around -3 standard deviations. Samples run on the same
machine give results of less than 1 standard deviation. What could be the problem?
A. B is correct. Enyzmes are more active at 4 degrees celsius, and are preserved best. Enzymes will
degrade quickly at room temp.
Q. HIV-1 & HIV-2 combination ELISA test is positive in a patient with symptoms of immune deficiency.
Western blot was inconclusive for HIV-1. What do you do next?
c. do HIV-2 ELISA
Q. Steps of PCR?
A. The RAST test is a specific alergen test whereas RIST is a general allergt test.
Q. After collecting a blood sample in an EDTA tube, you find that the Hematocrit is very high (67%). What
should you do next?
a. collect blood again, but use less sodium citrate in the tube
A. A is coorect choice. A hematocrit > 55% requires an adjustment in the anticoagulant used in coag
assays, NaCitrate tubes. This concept is a bit confusing becasue we usually learn that coagulation tests
require 3.2% sodium citrate with a blood to aniticoagulant ration of 9:1. If you have never had to make this
adjustment, you might think that a high hemaocrit >55%, will mean a deviation from the 9:1 ratio in favor of
more blood, thus the blood to anti-coagulant ration will be greater than 9:1…but, this is not the case. The
high hematocrit means less plasma, thus you have excess anticoagulant. So the high hematocrit adjustment
means you need to remove excess antocoagulant.
Q. When you conduct a procedure using fluorescence, it’s important to protect yourself from the:
a. cover light
b. emitted light
c. exciting light
Q. Blood was collected on Nov 1. Blood was then frozen in glycerol on Nov 5. What should the expiration
date read?
Q. A person was successfully treated for syphilis 12 years ago. However, he has just come in again, worried
about having been reinfected. What would you look for in his blood?
a. TP-A
b. VDRL
Answer is VDRL —> Unlike non-treponemal tests, which show a decline in titers or become nonreactive
with effective treatment, most treponema-specific tests usually remain reactive for life. Because of the
persistence of reactivity, possibly for the life of the patient, treponemal tests are of no value to the clinician
in determining relapse, reinfection, or treatment efficacy. Therefore, a reactive treponemal test result only
indicates exposure to T. pallidum at some time during a person’s life. It does not indicate that the person
currently has an active syphilis infection.
Q. You suspect someone might have Jka, K and c antigens on their red cells. You figure out that they don’t
have Jka. You also test their serum and see the following:
24. Reagent strip detected no proteins but sulfosalicylic acid test did. Why?
25. I was shown a picture of what I believe were several immature granulocytes in a peripheral blood smear.
What stain should you use next to figure out this persons problem?
a. specific esterase
c. LAP
b. excess sodium
d. deficient potassium
e. deficient sodium
a. waxy cast
b. hyaline cast
c. WBC cast
a. myoglobin
B. cardiac troponins
c. CK-MB
29. HBa1c levels cannot always be used to monitor glucose levels in conditions such as:
A. Anti-I, is responsible for cold agglutinin disease. anti-P causes PCH, and anti-e causes Warm
Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia
Q. Synovial fluid collected in anticoagulant tube, what do you use to dilute the specimen?
A. Saline or Phosphate buffer with hyaluronidase…..you can’t use acetic acid because it disrupts the
hyaluronic componenet and will form a clot
Q. Bloodbank, in forward, reverse reaction… reaction in forward, but no reaction in reverse, what will do
you?
A. Incubate at room temp for 15-20 minutes. The reverse reaction is usually due some immunodepressed
event and the reactions will reveal.
A. Collect in Grey top, Sodium Fluoride, chill immediately and separate within 1 hour.
A. pseudogout, calcium pyrophosphate…..They are positively birefringent, appearing blue when aligned
parallel with the slow axis of the compensator and yellow when perpendicular.
Calcium pyrophosphate are rhomboid shaped crystals. monosodium urate crystals are negatively
birefringent, needles, and cause gout.
A. acetic acid-this causes a clot to form in normal synovial fluid…a poor clot formation with cloudiness is
an indication of inflammation.
Q. When a test cross-react with Rheumatoid factor… relation with Sensitivity and Specificity?
A. Cross reacting would produce a false positive , this would related to specificity….which is
TN/TN+FP…….sensitivity is TP/TP+FN
Q. This is platelet-vessel wall interaction,Bleeding time prolonged,Platelet counts decreased and on
peripheral smear, the platelets are increase in size. choose best answere:1.von Willebrand disease 2.
Bernard-Soulier syndrome 3.congenital afibrinogenemia 4. Glanzmann’s Thrombasthenia
b.)Testicular cancer
c.)Pancreatic
d.)nonseminomatous
Q. if the protein elevation from B1B2 & gamma are to merge together what immunoglobulin would it
indicate?
a.)IgM
b.)IgA
c.)IgD
e.)IgE
Q. fungus organism grows well with oil overlay technique(malassezia furfur)
Q. when N.meningitis in in CSF, (i can’t remember exactly, does it have capsule or pili something like
that…)
A. It has a lipooligosaccharide (LOS) that acts as an endotoxin and hemolyzer…responsible for
septicemia……capsule that prevenst phagocytosis, and pili for attachment and cell internalization.
Q. Rickettsia…rickettsi
Q. -there was few questions about Fungus. with petridish picture,morphology.
and microscopic pictures, like Alternaria spp, Geotrichum spp, Trichosporon spp.
A. IDA, blood transfusions and other diseases that cause abnormal RBC turnover
A. This is termed a mixed acid-base disorder or a complex acid base disorder. I know for sure becasue I
was having trouble with this question and decided to use the online acid-base disorder calculator….so it
agrees
———————————————————————————————–
how many bag blood to prepare platelet apheresis= check blood bank book.
alpha thalassemia with what Hb?= Hgn A2 and F.= slight high and Low Hgb A
moth ball intoxication will see what in RBC= Heinz Bodies and Basophilic stippling.
blood gas use what tube/synringe to transport= heparin and kept on ice immediately.
anaerobic bacteria= Review them. its just plain and simple in page 159 Bottom Line book.
Corr wbc count with 50 cells ( I changed it to wbc X 50 divided by (nRbcs + 100),
Blood bank discrepancies, panels, enzymes, what to do next, =check freezer temp every 4 hrs!
conj and unconj bili, urobilinogen,inc and dec= very easy check Bottom line Table.
know which anemias are micro/macro/hypo/hyper, I calculated rbc indices to rule out answers.= check by
MCV and MCHC.
density of proteins in decreasing to ascending order I dunno what IDL is but I put it in between VLDL and
LDL.
Normal total CK but increase in troponin in what? = unstable angina or acute M.I
what stain to see the cells in the cast?= i said oil red o only one that made sense
picture of dysmorphic rbcs and asked why ? =(got it down to oxidizing drugs or antimalarial drug)
very important Question—>one said strep b was neg on CAMP test w/ s. aureus, do what next=Answer–>
(do biochem rxns for b or run CAMP with beta lysin s. aureus I chose this)
at end of protein electro which is closest to the cathode= (gamma and beta)
asked about a csf electrophoresis showing anodal band to albumin =(picked normal results)
had 2 questions, one which increases/or falsley inc hgA1c = Hg S or IDA(iron Def Anemia)
what decreased A1c= Hemolysisi or RBC destruction.
high pH and something but what enzyme (Pagets was the answer b/c ALP (Alkaline pH)
what hepatis ag/ab will make sure vaccination has occured= Hep Ab S
Glomerularnephritis = Strep A
————————————————————————————————
2. What is the normality of a solution of sodium hydroxide (molecular weight=40) containing 20 grams in
100 mL of solution?
A. 5.0N
B. 1.0N
C. 0.5N
D. 0.4N
A. 1 and 2 only
B. 1 and 3 only
C. 2 and 3 only
D. 1,2, and 3
4. If test results are within +/-2 standard deviations, the ratio of test results beyond the +/-2 SD limit will be
1 out of
A. 3
B. 5
C. 20
D. 300
A. Transports glucose
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B. Regulates body temperature
7. Which instruments do NOT measure concentrations of a particular molecule but of the total ions and
molecules in general (number of moles per kilogram of water)?
A. Osmometers
B. Spectrophotometers
D. Immunochemical analyzers
B. Refractive index
C. Specific gravity
D. Ionic strength
9. Most methods for the determination of blood creatinine are based on the reaction of creatinine and
A. Sulfuric acid
B. Alkaline picrate
C. Acetic anhydride
D. Ammonium hydroxide
A. Conjugated bilirubin
B. Prehepatic bilirubin
C. Total bilirubin
D. Biliverdin
A. Kidney disease
B. Liver disease
C. Myocardial infarction
D. Obstructive jaundice
A. Lactic acid
C. Oxaloacetic acid
D. Acetic acid
A. ACTH
B. Insulin
C. Thyroxin
D. Hydrocortisone
15. Albumin, alpha1, alpha2, beta, and gamma globulin are electrophoretic fractions of
A. Hemoglobin
B. Amino acid
C. Serum protein
D. Serum lipoprotein
16. Which one of the following methods could be used to study protein abnormality?
A. Isoenzyme electrophoresis
B. Immunoelectrophoresis
17. Which of the following enzymes are present in heart muscle? 1. lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) (LD) 2.
creatinine phosphokinase (CPK) (CK) 3. serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT)
A. 2 only
B. 1 and 2 only
D. 1,2, and 3
A. Bound to globulin
B. Bound to albumin
C. Free
D. Bound to cholesterol
A. Blood coagulation
D. Salt intake
20. When using a buffer with a pH of 8.6, each of the serum proteins in an electrical field migrates toward
C. Either pole
D. Both poles
A. Urea
B. Creatine
C. Creatinine
D. Uric acid
22. When six or more consecutive daily values are distributed on one side of the mean but maintain a
constant level, it is known as a
C. Shift
D. Trend
23. The degree that a procedure deviates from a known value or from a calculated mean value is known as
B. Quality control
C. Stardard deviation
D. Percent deviation
24. Which one of the following hemoglobin determination methods is recommended by the International
Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards and the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory
Standards?
A. Oxyhemoglobin
B. Sulfhemoglobin
C. Methemoglobin
D. Cyanmethemoglobin
25. When using white blood cell pipets for performing a white cell count, blood is diluted
A. 1:200
B. 1:50
C. 1:20
D. 1:10
A. Variable in shape
27. When performing automated cell counts, most automated cell counted instruments
28. Supravital staining of red cells with a deficiency of G-6-PD will demonstrate the presence of
A. Howell-Jolly bodies
B. Rubriblasts
D. Plasmodium species
A. Macrocytic
B. Aplastic
C. Hemolytic
D. Microcytic
30. The principle involved in some automated blood cell counters is based on the
31. During the maturation of a blood cell, the nuclear chromatin pattern becomes
A. Finer
B. More dense
C. Less dense
D. More acidic
33. An elevated leukocyte count with increased numbers of neutrophilic granulocytes USUALLY indicates
A. Bacterial infection
B. Viral infection
C. Infectious mononucleosis
D. Allergic reaction
A. Tourniquet
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B. Bleeding time
C. Prothrombin time
35. On most automated cell counted, background counts are made using
A. Distilled water
B. Highly-diluted blood
C. Diluting fluid
36. Brilliant cresyl blue or new methylene blue are stains used for counting
A. Reticulocytes
B. Platelets
C. Malaria
D. Howell-Jolly bodies
A. Clear (colorless)
B. Bright red
D. Greeen
38. The distance between the ruled surface and cover slip of the hemacytometer is
A. 0.1 cm
B. 1.0 cm
C. 0.1 mm
D. 1.0 mm
39. On an automated blood cell counter, the two parameters affected by a high background count would be
B. Icteric plasma
C. A high hematocrit
A. Circulating eosinophiles
B. Phagocytic neutrophils
A. DNA remnants
B. RNA remnants
C. Basophilic granules
D. Howell-Jolly bodies
43. A substance that produces a prolonged prothrombin time when given orally is
A. Heparin
B. Protamine sulfate
C. Saliclate
D. Coumadin
44. The screenign or presumptive test for the osmotic fragility of red cells is normal when hemolysis begins
in
A. 0.50% NaCl
B. 0.85% NaCl
C. 0.90% NaCl
D. 1.34% NaCl
B. Factor X deficiency
C. Hemophilia
46. Which stage of the coagulation process would be affected by a deficiency of Factor VIII?
A. First
B. Second
C. Third
D. Fourth
A. Serum only
B. Plasma only
48. In serologic tests for syphulis, reagin reactivity may result from an acute or chronic infection such as
A. Pneumonia
B. Infectious hepatitis
C. Lupus erythematosus
D. Helicobacter pylori
49. The quantity of inactivated serum used for qualitative VDRL test is
A. 0.02 mL
B. 0.05 mL
C. 0.10 mL
D. 0.15 mL
C. Foreign to animal
A. Rheumatoid arthritis
B. Thyroiditis
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C. Vulvovaginitis
D. Infectious mononucleosis
52. The accepted and usual time and temperature used for the inactivation of serum is
A. 25 C for 1 hour
B. 37 C for 30 min
C. 56 C for 30 min
D. 56 C for 10 min
53. Group O patients can safely recieve plasma from a donor who is group
A. A only
B. AB only
C. O only
D. A, AB, or O
55. Which one of the following may detect a hemolytic transfusion reaction?
A. Urine porphyrins
B. Serum haptoglobin
D. Pre-transfusion bilirubin
A. Anti-A serum
B. Anti-AB serum
C. Anti-A2 serum
57. When a patient has been sensitized, which of the following tests would be used to help identify the
antibody that is attached to the patient's cells IN VIVO?
B. Elution
58. Who is credited with processing the most readily acceptable theory of ABO inheritance?
A. Weiner
B. Landsteiner
C. Levine
D. Bernstein
59. During the crossmatch procedure, a negative rsult on the addition of Coombs control cells indicated that
the
Discuss
B. Crossmatch is incompatible
D. Antiglobulin reagent is detecting antibody globulin, indicating adequate washing during the crossmatch
procedures.
A. Chloride
B. Potassium
C. Sodium
D. Bicarbonate
A. Is produced in humans
63. A donor who recently tested positive for HBsAg should be deferred
A. For 6 months
B. For 1 year
C. For 5 years
D. Permanently
A. Reverse typing
B. Immunoglobulin testing
C. D(u) testing
D. Autoagglutination tests
65. A mother is Rh(D) negative. The father is homozygous Rh(D) positive. All of their offspring will be
A. Erythroblastotic
66. According to Landsteiner, when a specific antigen is present on blood cells, the corresponding antibody
67. Cell/antibody mixtures used in tube testing to determine ABO Group should be centrifuged for
B. 2 min @ 2000
C. 3 min @ 3000
D. 5 min @ 5000
B. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
C. Staphylococcus epidermidis
D. Group A streptococcus
A. Indicates no infection
A. Bacillus anthracis
B. Listeria monocytogenes
C. Clostridium botulinum
D. Nocardia asteroides
A. Streptococcus pneumoniae
B. Staphylococcus aureus
73. Which media is used to ISOLATE Staphylococcus aureus from specimens that have mixed bacterial
flora such as feces?
B. An enrichment broth
C. MacConkey agar
A. Trichomonas hominis
B. Entamoeba coli
C. Trichomonas tenax
D. Trichomonas vaginalis
75. Which organisms are described as minute, very plemorphic, sometimes coccobacillary, gram-negative
rods that must have media enriched with X and V factors?
A. Escherichia coli
B. Listeria monocytogenes
C. Haemophilus influenzae
D. Bacillus anthracis
76. Bordet-Gengou and Eugon agar base with fresh blood is used for the isolation of
A. Haemophilus
B. Bordetella
C. Pasteurello
D. Yersinia
77. According to the Lancefield scheme of classifying the Streptococcus species, the neterococci are placed
in group
A. A
B. B
C. C
D. D
C. Is motile
79. Which one fo the following test differentiates Staphylococcus aureus from other types of staphlococci?
B. Coagulase
C. Catalase
D. Fibrinolysin
A. Haemophilus aegyptius
B. Haemophilus ducreyi
C. Haemophilus influenzae
D. Bordetella pertussis
A. Mordant
B. Decolorizer
C. Secondary stain
D. Primary stain
82. The organism that can cause rheumatic fever and/or glomerular nephritis is
A. Staphylococcus aureus
B. Streptococcus pyogenes
C. Streptococcus viridans
D. Staphylococcus haemolyticus
83. A variety of media may be safely stored for months is care is taken to
84. In the 1980s, Ewing, Bergey, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) divided the
Enterobacteriaceae into several different tribes. Which one of the following is NOT a valid tribe under their
classification scheme?
A. Escherichieae Escherichia-Shigella
B. Citrobactereae Citobacter
D. Edwardsielleae Edwardsiella
A. Cattle
B. Swine
C. Fish
D. Man
A. Ammonium sulfate
B. Zinc chloride
C. Zinc sulfate
D. Concentrated formalin
A. Hookworm
B. Pinworm
C. Filarial worm
D. Flat worm
89. The cystic stage of development has NOT been demonstrated in which of the following organisms?
A. Balantidium coli
B. Endolimax nana
C. Trichomonas vaginalis
D. Iodamoeba butschlii
A. Schistosoma mansoni
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B. Schistosoma haematobium
C. Schistosoma japonicum
D. Schistosoma hepatica
92. The modified Griess nitrite test, when positive to any degree, is virtually dianostic of
A. Simple filtration
B. Secretion
C. Selective re-absorption
D. Re-absorption of water
94. In using a urinometer to measure specific gravity, the correction facotr for each 3 degrees C higher or
lower than calibration temperature is
A. +/- 1.001
B. +/- 0.100
C. +/- 0.010
D. +/- 0.001
A. Benedict's
B. Clinitest
C. Pandy
D. Dip stick
A. Proteus vulgaris
B. Trichomonas vaginalis
C. Spirochetes
D. Spermatozoa
97. Metabolic acidosis can be detected by testing urine for the presence of
A. Ketone bodies
B. Protein
C. Glucose
D. Uric acid
98. Freezing point depression measurements are part of which one of the following urine test procedures?
A. Hydrometry
B. Osmolality
C. Refractive index
D. Specific gravity
A. Pale yellow
B. Dark yellow
C. Reddish-yellow
D. Amber
A. Alkaline copper
B. Nitroprusside
C. Ferric chloride
D. 2,4 dichloraniline
__________________________________________________________________________
The 30 X 50 um ovum illustrated in the image are most commonly observed by microscopic examination of
transparent adhesive tape mounts of perianal skin of children who have complained of nocturnal anal
Enterobius
vermicularis
Enterobius vermicularis is a correct response. Enterobius ova are oval in outline with flattening along one
margin, simulating a deflated football. The shell is smooth and slightly thickened. A well-developed larva is
commonly observed internally, which retracts away from the inner shell membrane, leaving an open space.
Necator americanus is an incorrect response. Necator ova, although also oval in outline, are not flattened
on one side and the outer shell is thin and transparent. Although the inner yolk sac retreats, leaving a clear
space beneath the shell, further development into an embryo is not observed.
Isospora belli is an incorrect response. Isospora oocysts are also oval in outline and have a smooth, thin
outer shell. Internally, a single spherical sporocyst may be observed, but more typically mature oocysts are
noted which contain two sporocysts. One is advised to search further in a smear preparation for detection of
oocysts with double sporocysts to ensure an accurate identification.
Trichuris trichiura is an incorrect response. Trichuris ova are easy to recognize with their barrel-shape and
a distinctive protruding, convex, hyaline polar plug at each end. The shell is smooth but relatively thick and
the internal developing embryo reaches the inner lining of the shell without leaving an open space.
__________________________________________________________________________
Generally speaking, infant RBCs demonstrate the presence of the ____ antigen, which
gradually decreases as one ages. Conversely, the ____ phenotype is not expressed at birth, but increases in
frequency as one ages.
i;
I
From birth onwards – “i” antigen slowly decreases on the RBC surface, while “I” antigen increases
reciprocally. It’s a unique characteristic of this particular pair, with no other pair of common blood bank
relevant antigens demonstrating such a trait.
In practice, while auto anti-i is rarely seen, when suspected, one could simply react the patient’s serum with
cord RBCs, expecting to see a strong reaction. Meanwhile, reacting the patient’s serum with adult RBCs
would yield a weak or no reaction.
__________________________________________________________________________
A patient admitted to the hospital for ongoing fever produces the following laboratory results:
Which of the following conditions correlates closely with this patient's results?
Leukemoid
Reaction
A high white blood cell count, usually 50-100 x 109/L with a left shift is a common finding in leukemoid
reactions. In addition, a key feature of a leukemoid reaction is a high LAP score.
Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia (CML) is highly associated with the Philadelphia chromosome, or
translocation (9;22)(q34;q11). CML typically shows a low LAP score, in contrast to the findings in this case.
Finally, Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria (PNH) is also associated with a low LAP score, which
excludes this as the correct answer.
__________________________________________________________________________
Recognized as non-
self
Only non-self antigens can be immunogenic. Self antigens are normally recognized by the immune system
as part of the host, so an immune response does not normally occur. Non-self antigens are immunogenic
since they have the potential to cause an immune response.
__________________________________________________________________________
Based on the morphologic features of this 40 um (in diameter) ovum as seen in the upper photomicrograph
the accompanying scolex of the adult worm as illustrated in the lower image, select the presumptive
identification of this cestode from the multiple choice answers listed below.
Taenia
solium
Taenia solium is the correct response. Although the spherical ova with their thick, striate shell and internal
hooklets does not rule out Taenia saginata, the scolex of T. solium, with its distinctive rostellum armed with
a ring of hooklets, serves to exclude T. saginata, the scolex of which is flat and rounded and devoid of an
armed rostellum.
Hymenolepis nana is an incorrect response. Hymenolepis ova have a thin outer non-striated shell and an
inner membrane within which three pairs of hooklets are contained. The scolex of the adult worm also has
an armed rostellum, but in contrast to T. solium, is small and projects outward.
Diphyllobothrium latum is an incorrect response. Diphyllobothrium ova are large (up to 70 um), and have a
thin smooth shell with a distinctive, inconspicuous non-shouldered operculum at one end. The scolex of the
adult worm is long and narrow with a dorso-ventral groove surrounded on either side by lateral lip-like
folds. __________________________________________________________________________
Page 194 of 287
Warfarin-based (coumarin derivative) oral anti-coagulant therapy is commonly monitored with :
PT/IN
R
Coumarin derivatives inhibit the vitamin K dependent Factors (II, VII, X) which can be measured with the
PT and monitored frequently with the INR assay.
__________________________________________________________________________
I reside inside red blood cells, where I grow and grow until the cells are eventually destroyed.
The gametocytes of Plasmodium falciparum are the only malarial organisms that assume a characteristic
banana shape.
__________________________________________________________________________
The antecubital area is usually the site used for venipuncture because of its accessibility. Which of the
following veins is NOT located in the antecubital area.
Median cubital
vein
Femoral vein
Basilic vein
Cephalic vein
The femoral vein is located in the groin area along with the femoral artery. It is not used for routine
venipuncture.
__________________________________________________________________________
Which of the following conditions would produce these results in an anemic patient:
MCV = 115, MCH = 30, MCHC = 34
pernicious anemia
anemias.
__________________________________________________________________________
Si : Citrobacter
Ed: Edwardsiella
Poop: Proteus
Salmonella typhi
PRINCIPLE:
NOTES:
The solubility test is the most common screening test for sickle cell or presence of HbS. It is based on the
relative insolubility of HbS when combined with a reducing agent such as sodium dithionite. When
anticoagulated blood is mixed the reducing agent, the red cells will lyse due to the presence of saponin and
the hemoglobin in the red cells will be released.
The solubility test cannot be used to differentiate sickle cell disease (homozygous for HbS) from sickle cell
trait (heterozygous for HbS).
If HbS is present, it will form liquid crystals and give a cloudy or turbid appearance to the solution. If HbS
is not present, the solution will appear transparent.
SOUCES OF ERROR:
1. A patient with an exceptionally high hematocrit may give a false positive result, while an individual
with a very low hemoglobin may give a falsely negative result.
3. False positives can occur with elevated plasma proteins and lipids.
The reactivity of blood group A is confirmed by detecting the presence of which immunodominant sugar
molecule?
N-acetyl-D-neuraminic acid
L-fucose
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N-acetyl-D-galactosamine
N-acetyl-D-glucosamine
D-galactose
The A gene codes for production of N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase, an enzyme which binds N-
acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) to the H structure (L-fucose). N-acetylglucosamine is a sugar substance
thought to be useful in treatment of Crohn’s Disease, osteoarthritis, and inflammatory bowel disease. N-
acetyl-D-neuraminic acid is nothing I’ve ever seen associated with blood banking (but it sounds cool,
doesn’t it?). In my opinion, the best way to recognize the full sugar name is to remember the abbreviation.
GalNAc would likely point you towards something containing a “…gal…” in the answer.
The mating of parents of which two ABO phenotypes can potentially produce offspring with ALL of the
common four blood types?
AB and O
AB and A
AB and AB
A and B
AB and B
Each individual inherits one ABO gene (A, B, or O) from each parent. Considered together, the two genes
determine the ABO phenotype. A problem like this could be solved using a simple Punnet Square (see
below), where the possible phenotypes of the offspring are filled in using the various parental combinations.
Try out the various combinations to see if any give you the possibility of all four types. When you are doing
this, don’t get hung up on using only homozygous parental genotypes. Remember, two alleles make up each
gene, and the “O” allele is silent. So, a parent of blood group phenotype “A,” for example, could have a
genotype of either “AA” or “AO”. If you assume “AO” as the genotype for one parent and “BO” for the
other, all four blood types are possible in the offspring, as illustrated in the table below.
B O
A AB AO
O BO OO
Bombay phenotype (Oh) individuals may have antibodies with all the following specificities EXCEPT:
Anti-A
Anti-B
Anti-H
Anti-O
Anti-A,B
Immune A and B alloantibodies differ from non-red cell stimulated (naturally occurring) A and B
alloantibodies in that the immune antibodies:
Are generally IgG
Are unable to cross the placenta
Can be enhanced in reactivity by incubation at 4C
Cause direct agglutination at room temperature
Rarely cause clinical hemolysis
This question isn’t really about ABO so much as it’s about characteristics of IgG and IgM antibodies in
blood banking. In short, naturally occurring antibodies are generally of the IgM class, not able to cross the
placenta, enhanced in reactivity by incubation at 4C, and can cause direct agglutination at room temperature.
Page 204 of 287
These antibodies, aside from the ABO blood group, are not usually capable of causing clinical hemolysis.
IgG antibodies are typically what you ultimately get from red-cell stimulated antibody formation, and they
can cross the placenta and are not very reactive (if at all) at 4C and room temperature. They “like” the AHG
phase of testing and 37C, and generally are more likely to cause clinical hemolysis.
Which ABH substances would you expect to find in the saliva of a group A secretor?
H only
H and A
H and B
H and O
A
The secretor status of an individual (genotype SeSe or Sese) determines the formation of H antigen in
secretions, which in turn creates opportunity for A and B antigen formation, if either (or both) gene is
inherited. So, to answer this question, realize that if you are a secretor, you will have both H and A
substance in secretions if you are group A. It is estimated that almost 80% of the general population are
secretors. And, you would never fall for the “O” antigen in secretions, would you? There is no such thing as
O antigen!
Which of the following is the best explanation for why the ABO system is the most important blood group
system in transfusion safety?
ABO is the only blood group system in which reciprocal antibodies are normally produced for the antigens
an individual lacks
ABO antibodies are capable of causing rapid, severe intravascular hemolysis
Reactions with ABO antibodies are the most common cause of transfusion-related death
ABO antibodies are often implicated in severe hemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn
Routine ABO forward and reverse grouping is difficult to interpret and fraught with error
B is the best answer because of the great severity of ABO mismatch. While ABO is famous for the
reciprocal antibodies, it is not the only blood group with “naturally occurring” antibodies. Transfusion-
related acute lung injury (TRALI) is currently the most common cause of transfusion-related death (though
hemolytic transfusion reactions are second to TRALI). Answer D is incorrect because the HDFN caused by
ABO antibodies is generally mild. In group O moms, the antibodies are predominantly IgG, not IgM (as is
more common with other blood groups), and ABO HDFN is much more likely than with non-group O
moms. Answer E is a subjective statement; only a minority of samples submitted for ABO typing would
have discrepancies that cause difficult in interpretation (and we do a darn good job even with those!).
A 26 year old pregnant female is being tested prior to a scheduled C-section tomorrow. Her cell grouping
(forward typing) is consistent with blood group O, while her serum grouping (reverse grouping or back-
typing) appears to be group A. The most common reason for this type of ABO discrepancy is:
Bombay phenotype
She is a non-secretor
Issues with the integrity or identity of the sample are more likely than any other choice to cause this ABO
discrepancy. Bombay phenotype is extremely rare. Secretor status will not affect the ability to detect A and
B antigens on red cells. An uncalibrated centrifuge might make a difference in testing, but ABO system
antigens/antibodies are so hearty that they are likely to not be effected by over- or under-centrifugation.
Finally, while group A patients with AML can have an acquired weakening of their A antigen due to
hematologic malignancies, such an event would be less common than a sample integrity issue.
An ABO discrepancy between forward and reverse grouping owing to weak-reacting or missing antibodies
could be BEST explained by which of the following:
Patient has a subgroup of blood group A
Patient is very old or very young
Patient has acquired B phenotype
Patient has antibodies to low incidence antigens
Patient has antibodies against preservatives in reagent cells
In the very old and very young, the natural expression of isoagglutinins can either be depressed or delayed,
respectively. Group A subgroups often lead to missing red cell (forward) reactions, and the acquired B
phenotype results in extra red cell reactions; neither typically leads to missing antibody reactions.
Antibodies to low incidence antigens or reagents would give extra antibody reactions rather than missing
reactions. Other causes of weak-reacting or missing antibodies are: Patients with leukemias demonstrating
hypogammaglobulinemia (e.g., CLL), patients with lymphomas; patients using immunosuppressive drugs,
congenital agammaglobulinemia, and immunodeficiency diseases.
A blood donor has the genotype hh, AB. What is his apparent red cell phenotype during routine forward and
reverse group typing?
A
B
O
AB
Cannot be determined
Without an H allele (i.e., with either a HH or Hh genotype), the “H antigen” cannot be formed. As a result,
the A and B red cell antigens that should have been made due to the AB genotype would not be formed (“no
H, no A or B”). This person’s red cells would appear to be group O (though they are better described as
“Bombay” or “Para-Bombay“; yes, another Bombay phenotype question!).
The major difference between the A1 and A2 subgroups is quantitative; A1 RBCs have about five times
more A antigen than A2 RBCs (and, as a result, much less H antigen). There are also, however, some
qualitative differences between these two subgroups, as evidenced by the fact that A2 individuals can, on
occasion, make anti-A1 (1-8% of the time). This antibody, while we talk about it a lot and it can lead to
ABO discrepancies in serum typing, is usually (though not always) clinically insignificant. Most A2 people
have exactly the same antibody that A1 people have: Anti-B. The lectin of Dolichos biflorus, in
concentrations used in laboratories, only agglutinates RBCs containing A1 specificity, while the lectin of
Ulex europaeus agglutinates RBCs with increased H antigen, like most A2 RBCs.
Which of the following genes codes for production of the same basic antigen as the H gene?
O
Le
Lu
Se
A
The Se (or “secretor”) gene product is an enzyme that adds a fucose sugar to a glycoprotein chain called a
“type 1 chain.” This results in formation of the “H antigen” on these chains, which are found primarily in
secretions (get it? “Se” for “secretions!”) and plasma. Some people call this “Type 1 H antigen.” The H gene
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product is also a fucose-transferring enzyme (a “fucosyl transferase” or “FUT”) that makes H on “type 2
chains,” primarily on the red cell surface. So, two different genes code for enzymes that cause formation of
basically the same antigen, just on different types of chains.
The labels have come off of some of the testing reagents in your Blood Bank. Your tech is trying to find her
anti-B, and she asks you what color anti-B should be. You reply:
"Green"
"Orange"
"Blue"
"Yellow"
reagent anti-B is colored yellow, while reagent anti-A is colored blue (I’m told this varies in other countries,
so check your local blood bank if you are out of the U.S.). I’m sure there is some Latin correlation or
something, but it’s just silly to me! Why the heck wouldn’t you make anti-B “blue”? As dumb as I think this
question is, variants of it have appeared on standardized examinations.
Which of the following statements is TRUE regarding Hemolytic Disease of the Fetus/Newborn (HDFN)
caused by ABO antibodies?
Hemolysis is typically severe in ABO HDFN
ABO HDFN rarely occurs during the first pregnancy
ABO HDFN is most common with O mothers and A babies
A negative cord blood direct antiglobulin test excludes ABO HDFN
ABO HDFN occurs less commonly than Rh HDFN
HDFN caused by ABO incompatibility between mother and child is, in fact, the most common form of
HDFN. In virtually all situations, ABO HDFN is seen with a group O mother and a group A or B child.
Group O individuals carry IgG ABO antibodies that, unlike the primarily IgM antibodies in non-group O
people, are transported across the placenta and enter the fetal circulation. These antibodies (either anti-A,
anti-B, or anti-A,B) are “naturally occurring,” like all ABO antibodies, so the interaction may occur during
the first pregnancy (unlike the classic form of HDFN due to Rh antibodies, which usually occurs in second
pregnancies and beyond). However, the relatively weak ABO antigen expression on the surface of fetal and
neonatal red cells means that the clinical and laboratory sequelae (including hemolysis) of ABO HDFN are
usually not severe. In fact, affected babies may have a negative direct antiglobulin test (DAT).
Weak D (formerly known as “Du“) occurs when someone who is actually D-positive has fewer D antigens
on their red blood cells than are normally present. This quantitative problem may cause problems with
routine Rh typing, as testing the RBCs with anti-D either gives either no reaction or a reaction that is much
weaker than the typical strong reactions expected in a D-positive person (i.e., they may appear to be D-
negative). This usually is a result of mutations affecting (but not eliminating) portions of the D antigen.
Weak D red cells that react negatively with laboratory anti-D (which contains a mixture of IgG and IgM
anti-D) are shown to be D-positive when an indirect antiglobulin test (IAT) is performed (see my video
called “Weak in the D’s” on my video page for more details). In this setting, the IAT is called a “weak D
test.” We used to think that most weak D happened due to inheritance of an allele coding for the C antigen
on the opposite chromosome to a D allele (like choice E, and known as “C in trans”), but specific antigen-
weakening mutations far outweigh that scenario. Weak D and partial D (where the D antigen has missing
and abnormal parts) may have overlapping features, and cannot be reliably distinguished except by Rh
genotyping. Partial D is a problem because those patients may develop anti-D when transfused D-positive
RBCs, so the distinction is important. A 2015 expert taskforce recommended Rh genotyping for all serologic
weak D patients and pregnant moms, to determine if the person has weak D types 1, 2, or 3. Those types are
NOT at risk for developing anti-D from transfusion of D-positive RBCs or delivering a D-positive baby,
while other types should be treated as if they were D-negative. Complicated, I know! Dr. Connie Westhoff
explains it much better than I in the BBGuy Essentials Podcast, Episode 005!
Which of the following red blood cell abnormalities is associated with the Rhnull phenotype?
Stomatocytes
Ovalocytes
Acanthocytes
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Spherocytes
Schistocytes
Stomatocytes (“mouth cells”) are associated with Rhnull, which is a complete lack of all Rh antigens (not
just D), caused either by mutations leading to inactive Rh genes or by mutations leading to defects in RHAG
(the associated glycoprotein membrane structure that must be present for Rh antigens to be expressed). A
mild hemolytic anemia is also seen in these patients. Schistocytes are seen in intravascular hemolysis,
spherocytes in extravascular hemolysis, ovalocytes in iron-deficiency anemia, and acanthocytes in the
McLeod syndrome associated with the lack of Kx antigen (as well as other non-blood bank stuff).
Blood banking students must be able to quickly and fluently convert phenotype information into possible
genotype combinations. Even though the Wiener terminology is dated and his genetic theories incorrect, all
blood banks (and those who write test questions) assume that you know the Rh haplotypes indicated by the
terminology above. If this is new to you, take some time to review the Rh terminology module elsewhere on
the site. For review, the combinations are as follows:
D Positive Haplotypes D Negative Haplotypes
R1: DCe r’: dCe
R2: DcE r”: dcE
R0: Dce r: dce
Rz: DCE ry: dCE
For questions such as this, I think that the best strategy is to start by seeing which combinations could even
possibly result in a patient with the specified phenotype (even though the question is asking for most likely,
start with possible). A quick examination shows that choices A, C, and E can be ruled out immediately,
since none of them would result in a phenotype with all five main Rh antigens present. Choices B and D,
however, would both give the correct combination. So, you need more information, right? Fortunately, of
the eight combinations in the table above, only four occur with substantial frequency (I call those the “Big
Four,” and they are in red in the table above). For this question, simply evaluate whether either option
contains a combination that is out of the Big Four. Note that both combinations (R1 and R2) in choice B are
in the Big Four, but only one of the two (R0) in choice D is in the Big Four. As a result, R1R2 is always
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more likely for this phenotype than R0ry.This is true regardless of the race of the patient (though race will
be an issue in later questions).
four most common Rh haplotypes (the “Big Four”) are R1, R2, R0, and r, as mentioned previously. These
four occur with differing frequencies in Caucasians and African-Americans, as follows:
Caucasians: R1 > r > R2 > R0
African-Americans: R0 > r > R1 > R2
For strategy, start again by determining which of the combinations are possible; I hope that you will agree
that choices A, B, and E are possible and choices C, D, and F will not result in the appropriate phenotype.
Next, eliminate choices where one or more of the haplotypes is not a member of the Big Four; choice E is
eliminated by that strategy. Finally, compare the relative frequencies in the requested racial population. In
this case, given that R1 is the most frequent haplotype in caucasians, and it is present in both choice A and
choice B, you are left with deciding whether R0 or r is more common in caucasians. A glance at the table
above shows you that r is more common (in fact, it is over ten times more common), and so choice B is the
correct answer.
Several genotypes are possible for an individual that has a phenotype of:
D+C+E+c+e+
Which of the following genotypes is NOT possible?
R1R2
R2r'
R1r"
R0r"
Rzr
. The answers are written in the Wiener Rh nomenclature, as outlined above. It is easier to understand which
Rh antigens are present in a given genotype by converting the Wiener shorthand to the Fisher-Race
nomenclature (for example, R1r = DCe/dce). Even though neither of these terminology systems accurately
reflect the genetics of the Rh system, they are commonly used in blood banking. When a patient carries the
first five Rh antigens, six possible genotypes could lead to that phenotype (can you figure it out? Take a
second and try before you read the next sentence).
Those six are: R1R2, R1r”, R2r’, R0ry, RzR0, and Rzr. The R0r” genotype in choice D will produce a
phenotype that is missing the C antigen.
A 35 year old O-negative male trauma patient receives a transfusion of two units of O-positive red blood
cells before his blood type is known. After his typing is completed, he is switched to O-negative and he
Historically, blood bankers would say that D-negative people receiving D-positive red cell transfusions had
a close to 80% chance of forming anti-D (and that the risk didn’t really change regardless of how many D-
positive units a person received). That statistic was based on exposure to D in D-negative healthy people,
however, and the reality is that most patients getting this type of exposure are far from healthy! Current
studies have shown the risk to be closer to 20-25% in hospitalized patients, which is still really high, but not
nearly as high as we thought. It is very unlikely that this man will develop an acute hemolytic reaction,
unless he already has a pre-formed anti-D (from a previous D-positive transfusion). Even a delayed
hemolytic reaction is unlikely in this situation, as the transfused cells will likely no longer be around by the
time any antibody could be formed. So, the final question is whether prevention is indicated in the form of
RhIG. I personally do not think that such an intervention is the greatest idea, due to the facts that a) A large
amount of RhIG would be required (at least 20 vials, which could be given intravenously), and b) If the
RhIG works (coating and resulting in clearance of the D-positive RBCs from the circulation), you might
THEN be dealing with the consequences of hemolysis. I don’t believe in it, but there are those who feel
strongly the other way.
What percentage of blood specimens derived from the Caucasian population will have a positive
agglutination result with the anti-c reagent?
15%
35%
50%
80%
100%
This is a complicated way to ask the question, “What percentage of the Caucasian population is c positive?”
80% of Caucasians are positive for the c antigen. The c antigen is present in 96% of those of African descent
and 47% of Asians.
Which alloantibody is most likely to be produced if a patient that has the Rh genotype of R1R1 is transfused
with red blood cells that have an Rh genotype of R0R0?
Anti-D
Anti-C
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Anti-c
Anti-E
Anti-e
A patient has a chance to produce an alloantibody if they are exposed to a red blood cell antigen they lack on
their own red blood cells. In this case a patient with the Rh genotype of R1R1 (or DCe/DCe) lacks the Rh
antigens E and c. The patient is exposed to red blood cells with the Rh genotype of R0R0 (Dce/Dce). The
transfused red blood cells carry the c antigen the patient lacks. This can result in the production of Anti-c.
Which of the following techniques will not assist in differentiating between the antibodies Anti-D and Anti-
LWa?
Testing the patient plasma against cells that have been treated with ficin or papain
Testing the patient plasma against D-negative cord cells
Performing an adsorption/elution procedure using D-negative adult cells
Testing the patient plasma against cells that have been treated with 0.2 M DTT
Testing the patient plasma against cells from a donor that is currently pregnant
In which of the following groups is Weak D testing required if the initial D typing results appear negative?
Routine testing of pregnant female blood recipients
Rh typing of allogeneic (volunteer) whole blood donors
Pretransfusion testing for sickle cell anemia patients
Pretransfusion testing for cardiac surgery patients
Confirmatory testing of D-negative RBC received by a transfusion service
Anti-D is an IgG antibody that can cause hemolytic disease of the fetus/newborn (HDFN) and hemolytic
transfusion reactions. The D antigen is not destroyed by treatment with either enzymes (like ficin) or
sulfhydryl reagents (like DTT), so anti-D would still react with D-positive cells following treatment with
either reagent. Anti-D is not an efficient complement-binding antibody, so the hemolysis caused by
incompatibility tends to be extravascular (where RBCs are coated with antibody and not immediately
hemolyzed but are destroyed/removed in the spleen or liver). Extravascular hemolysis typically results in
spherocyte formation rather than schistocytes.
Anti-G will react with red blood cells of each of the following phenotypes except:
D+C-
D-C+
D-C-
D+C+
rG
Anti-G is an antibody that reacts, shockingly, with the G antigen (also known as “Rh12”). While that seems
easy enough, what is not obvious is that the G antigen itself is actually the result of a common amino acid at
position 103 of either the RHD or RHCE protein. Inheritance of the RHD allele at the RHD site, or
inheritance of either or both of the RHCe and RHCE alleles at the RHCE site result in the presence of the
serine at that position (for the RHD allele, on the RHD protein; for the RHCe and/or RHCE alleles, on the
RHCE protein). As a result, G is best thought of as being present on an RBC that has the antigens D and/or
C. Anti-G, then, will agglutinate cells that are positive for the D antigen only, the C antigen only, or both the
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D antigen and the C antigen. The only RBC phenotype that will show no agglutination is a cell that is both D
negative and C negative (most D-negative cells are also G-negative due to the fact that most D-negative
individuals have the genotype rr). (EXCEPTION: Rare cells have been described that are D-negative and C-
negative but G-positive; i.e., they are D-C-G+. This scenario results from inheritance of a gene called rG
[say it like this: “little r-G”]. Anti-G will show agglutination with these RBCs because the G antigen is
present. This phenotype is not found on routine antibody panels).
If a patient had a positive direct antiglobulin test (DAT) with Anti-IgG, what would happen if you
performed a Weak D test on the patient cells?
A false-positive result
A false-negative result
An indeterminate test result
A valid test result
A valid test result if an Rh control is tested in parallel
The Weak D test is nothing more than an indirect antiglobulin test (IAT). Cells that are coated with IgG will
agglutinate whenever you add a reagent that contains Anti-IgG, as is done in the last step of an IAT. Anti-
IgG is added in both the direct and indirect antiglobulin tests (see the blog post on DAT vs. IAT if you are
confused). Cells that have a positive DAT (i.e., are already coated with antibody) will of course agglutinate
in the antiglobulin phase in an IAT. In this case, the patient has a positive DAT. The patient cells will give
false-positive agglutination during the Weak D test since Anti-IgG is added prior to reading the AHG phase
of testing. To get an accurate Weak D typing in this case, the antibody coating the cells must be removed.
This can be accomplished by adding a chemical such as Chloroquine diphosphate to the cells. Chloroquine
causes a gentle elution that removes the coating antibody without destroying the antigen integrity of the
cells. Once the DAT on the patient cells is negative, an accurate Weak D typing can be obtained.
Which of the following phenotypes is seen more frequently in Caucasians than in African-Americans?
Fy(a-b-)
S-s-U
R0 haplotype
K+ phenotype
The Fy(a-b-) phenotype is far more common in African Americans than Caucasians (68% vs. very rare). S-s-
U- is seen in about 1% of African-Americans, but is essentially never seen in Caucasians. The R0 haplotype
(also known as “Dce”) is the most frequently seen Rh haplotype in African-Americans, while R1 (“DCe”) is
most common in caucasians (R0 is actually fourth in frequency in Caucasians). The K antigen, however, is
present in 9% of Caucasians vs. only 2% of African-Americans.
Patients with which of the following red cell phenotypes are resistant to Plasmodium vivax malaria?
Fy(a-b-)
The Fy(a-b-) (“Duffy A-negative, B-negative”) phenotype is associated with resistance to P. vivax
infections. Nearly 100% of natives of West Africa, and approximately 68% of U.S. African-Americans have
this phenotype. Caucasians are almost never Fy(a-b-).
Which of the following red blood cell antigens has increased expression following incubation with
proteolytic enzymes?
Duffy (Fy) antigens
MN antigens
Lewis (Le) antigens
Ss antigens
Kell antigens
For most blood banking students, memorizing the effect of proteolytic enzymes on the major blood group
antigens is something that is important primarily for being able to answer questions on tests. However, we
do actually use the information in real life. M and N antigens, as well as all the major Duffy (Fy) antigens,
show decreased expression following exposure of red cells to proteolytic enzymes (think “Duffy is
destroyed”). On the other hand, the same enzymes lead to stronger expression of Lewis (and all ABO-related
blood group) antigens. Rh and Kidd (Jk) antigens also show strengthened expression following enzyme
treatment of the red blood cells. NOTE: The enzyme effect may seem like such a minor point, but you are
very likely to see this information on exams. In real life, enzyme reactions are used to confirm or refute the
presence of a particular antibody. For example, if an antibody suspected to be an anti-Fya gets stronger
following enzyme treatment of the red cells, it’s pretty unlikely to be a Duffy antibody.
You are told that a patient has the “McLeod Syndrome.” Which of the following is true regarding this
situation?
The patient might be susceptible to Streptococcus infections
The patient most likely has stomatocytes in his blood
The patient has increased levels of Kell blood group antigens
The patient may present with seizures or involuntary movements
The level of Kx antigen is increased in his blood
Lectins are substances derived from seeds of different plants (especially flowers) which act kinda like
antibodies; i.e., they agglutinate RBCs of particular phenotypes. NOTE: It’s really a little bit more
complicated than that, because there are some things that we can do with concentrations that will change the
lectin specificity. Lectins are useful in differentiating blood groups by their reactivity (or lack thereof) with a
particular lectin or group of lectins. Here are the lectin associations you should know:
Dolichos biflorus: Agglutinates RBCs of A1 phenotype
Ulex europaeus: Agglutinates RBCs carrying H antigen (more H, more agglutination)
Vicea graminea: Agglutinates RBCs carrying N antigen
Salvia, which is used in polyagglutination workups and agglutinates cells of the Tn type of
polyagglutination, is not really one that has to be committed to memory!
Which of the following red cell antigens is NOT weakly expressed or absent on red blood cells from a term
neonate?
K ("Big K") antigen
I antigen
A antigen
Le(a) antigen
P1 antigen
Which of the following is NOT TRUE about the I blood group system?
Auto-anti-I is associated with Mycoplasma pneumonia
Auto-anti-i is associated with infectious mononucleosis
i antigen is stronger on neonatal RBCs than adult RBCs
Patients with auto-anti-I may require a “prewarmed" crossmatch before transfusion
Antibodies in this system are usually clinically significant
Remember the easy way to think about I/i antigens: “Big I in big people, little i in little people,” and you
won’t go wrong. These antigens are biochemically and structurally related to ABO antigens but are distinct,
and they typically cause issues with the formation of “cold antibodies,” usually cold autoantibodies.
Although such antibodies are very common, most of them do NOT cause hemolysis (i.e., they are not
clinically significant. Once the antibodies are found, however, it may be difficult to find blood that is
crossmatch-compatible without warming up the reaction mixture first (“prewarmed crossmatch“). These
cold antibodies may cause hemolysis of transfused and native red blood cells, especially in the two classic
scenarios listed above.
Which of the following is TRUE of the P1PK and GLOB blood group systems?
The P antigen is the point of entry of Plasmodium vivax into the red cell
Anti-P1 is a common cause of hemolytic disease of the fetus/newborn
Anti-P1 is an insignificant antibody neutralized by pigeon egg white fluid
The lack of three main antigens in these systems may lead to the McLeod syndrome
Antibodies against P1PK/GLOB antigens are not associated with hemolytic transfusion reactions
The P1PK and GLOB blood group systems are really odd. First, the names: The “P1” and “PK” parts are
easy enough (P1 and Pk are the names of the two main antigens in the system). The “GLOB” system name
stands for “globoside,” and the P antigen is the main antigen in that system. The P1, Pk, and P antigens are
related biochemically and were once part of the same group of “P antigens.” Even though the ISBT now
A 5 year old child had an upper respiratory infection 5 days ago. Today, his mother brings him to the
emergency room because his urine was bright red this morning. Upon admission, he appears pale, his
hemoglobin is 6.9 g/dL, his urine and serum have free hemoglobin, and his direct antiglobulin test (DAT) is
weakly positive with anti-C3 only (anti-IgG is negative). Which of the following is most likely TRUE?
The most likely diagnosis is Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria
The antibody specificity is most likely anti-P
The child should be tested for syphilis
Transfusion should wait until antigen-negative blood is available
The antibody is most likely a high-titer IgM antibody
This case is a fairly classic presentation of Paroxysmal Cold Hemoglobinuria (PCH), a transient,
autoimmune hemolysis that most frequently occurs in children in association with a viral infection. PCH is
caused by an unusual IgG (not IgM) antibody that reacts in a very strange way. Most IgG antibodies react
with their target antigens at body temperature (37C), but not this antibody! This IgG, known famously as the
“Donath-Landsteiner biphasic hemolysin” binds to the P antigen on the patient’s own RBCs in cold
temperatures (4C in the laboratory, and in the cooler extremities in the body), and fixes complement to the
surface of the RBC. The antibody then dissociates and hemolyzes the red cell when the temperatures get
warmer! This “biphasic” hemolysis (bind in the cold, hemolyze when it’s warm) can be detected through the
use of the so-called “Donath-Landsteiner Test,” in which the blood bank tries to mimic the cold to warm
temperature change. Hemolysis only when the patient serum and test RBCs go from cold to warm
constitutes a positive D-L test and confirms the diagnosis. PCH was formerly seen most often in patients
with syphilis, but this association is far less common today (so no need to test the poor 5 year old for
syphilis!). The autoantibody here, targeted against the P antigen as mentioned above, will generally not
destroy transfused P-positive RBCs, so if transfusion is necessary due to intense hemolysis, P-positive units
may be used (good thing, too, since P-negative units are really rare!). The clinical situation is what
distinguishes this hemolysis from that seen in cold autoimmune hemolytic anemia (choice E).
The inheritance of this null leads to a syndrome with hematologic and chemical abnormalities. The
syndrome includes a mild compensated anemia, reticulocytosis and stomatocytosis. A decrease in
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haptoglobin and an increase in bilirubin are also seen. The null can have two origins, regulator and
amorphic. Name that null!
Rh(null) phenotype
Kell null phenotype
McLeod phenotype
Bombay phenotype
In(Jk)
Rh(null) syndrome is rare, and is characterized by a complete lack of all Rh antigens. It is caused by either a
mutation in the gene for the Rh-related Antigen (RHAG) (“regulator” type) or a mutation in the RHCE
genes along with a deletion in the RHD gene (“amorphic” type). Rh proteins are essential parts of the red
cell membrane (passing through the membrane 12 times). The absence of the Rh proteins leads to an
alteration of the RBC lipid bilayer, causing the abnormal laboratory results. Question contributed by Bill
Turcan, June 2015.
Inheriting this null for the common antigens in the corresponding blood group system leads to a resistance to
the malaria parasite, Plasmodium vivax. Name that null!
Bombay phenotype
Jk(a-b-)
Fy(a-b-)
Le(a-b-)
Kell null
Red blood cells with the Fy(a-b-) phenotype are resistant to invasion by Plasmodium vivax merozoites. The
null is the result of a homozygous inheritance of the silent Duffy allele sometimes called FY or Fy (which is
actually an altered FY*B allele). The FyFy genotype that leads to the Fy(a-b-) phenotype is extremely
common in West Africa and is found in 68% of African-Americans. Question contributed by Bill Turcan,
June 2015.
The rarest of all blood types is characterized by the absence of the common H antigen. This leads to the
production of a naturally occurring hemolytic Anti-H. People with this null can only be transfused with red
blood cells from other people with this null. Name that null!
McLeod phenotype
Bombay phenotype
Rh(null) phenotype
In(Lu)
MkMk
This null produces red blood cells that are resistant to lysis by the addition of 2M Urea, allowing for donor
compatibility screening for this phenotype without using antisera. Name that null!
Fy(a-b-)
Lu(a-b-)
Le(a-b-)
Jk(a-b-)
Co(a-b-)
The rare Kidd null phenotype is caused by the inheritance of two mutant, silent alleles at the JK locus (there
are multiple mutant alleles that lead to a lack of Kidd antigen expression). This genotype produces no Kidd
antigens on the red blood cells, and these patients may form anti-Jka, anti-Jkb, and anti-Jk3 (an antigen
present when either Jka or Jkb is present). The Kidd glycoprotein has a specific function: Transportation of
urea across the red blood cell membrane (in fact, the Kidd gene, SLC14A1, was formerly known as “Human
Urea Transport Gene 11” or “HUT11”). Normal RBCs are lysed rapidly in the presence of 2M urea (a pretty
high concentration), because the urea is transported quickly across the cell membrane, water follows because
the cell becomes hypertonic, and the RBC explodes due to the excess volume. Jk(a-b-) RBCs can’t transport
the urea nearly as quickly, however, so they do not lyse until 30 minutes or more have elapsed. Reference
labs can use this fact to quickly screen for Jk(a-b-), Jk3 negative RBCs by adding 2M urea to multiple
samples of donor cells (though they don’t do this all that often anymore). RBCs that do not lyse can then be
confirmed as negative by serologic or molecular techniques, thus saving time, expense, and potentially
scarce reagents. Question contributed by Bill Turcan, June 2015.
This null produces a naturally occurring antibody formerly called “anti-Tja.” This antibody is actually a
combination of three antibodies against three separate antigens in two different blood group systems. This
antibody also has an association with miscarriages early in a pregnancy. Name that null!
Oh phenotype
Kell null phenotype
Rh(null) phenotype
Fy(a-b-) phenotype
p phenotype
This null phenotype is found in a blood group system that is phenotypically linked to the secretor status of
the patient, and has antigens formed in body fluids such as saliva. Name that null!
Le(a-b-) phenotype
Lu(a-b-) phenotype
Fy(a-b-) phenotype
Jk(a-b-) phenotype
Co(a-b-) phenotype
The Lewis null phenotype is not that rare, as 22% of African-Americans and 6% of Caucasians are Le(a-b-).
The rare phenotype in the Lewis system is actually the one where the two main antigens are both positive:
Le(a+b+). The two common phenotypes, Le(a+b-) and Le(a-b+), reveal the secretor status of the patient,
without any need to conduct a secretor test. A patient that is Le(a+b-) is a non-secretor while a patient that is
Le(a-b+) is a secretor, by definition ( see the Lewis system video for more details). An Le(a-b-) patient lacks
an active LE allele (FUT3), which is also described as the lele genotype. Such patients could be either non-
secretors or secretors, and the secretor test that is performed on a saliva sample from the patient is positive in
approximately 80% of these individuals. Question contributed by Bill Turcan, June 2015.
Treating red blood cells with a sulfhydryl reagent such as DTT will artificially create red blood cells of this
null without a rare recessive genetic background origin. Name that null!
Rh(null) phenotype
McLeod phenotype
In(Jk)
Kell null phenotype
Fy(a-b-) phenotype
Kell null, or KoKo, red blood cells can be created in the antibody identification laboratory by treating the
RBCs with a sulfhydryl reagent (such as DTT, 2-ME, or AET). This reagent destroys the disulfide bonds
that assist in antigen expression in the Kell blood group system. These Kell null cells can be used to identify
an antibody against a high incidence antigen in the Kell blood group system, such as Anti-Kpb. Question
contributed by Bill Turcan, June 2015.
The Lutheran null phenotype, Lu(a-b-), has three possible genetic origins. The true null is the autosomal
recessive LuLu. The homozygous inheritance of this silent gene produces no Lutheran antigens on the red
blood cells. People with this version of the null phenotype can produce all Lutheran blood group system
antibodies including the rare Anti-Lu3. The Lutheran null phenotype can also be produced by one of two
suppressor genes. The autosomal dominant suppressor gene is called “In(Lu).” The X-linked dominant
suppressor gene is called “XS2.” Each of these suppressor genes limits the expression of Lutheran antigens
on red blood cells. Routine phenotyping appears to show no Lutheran antigens present. Adsorption/elution
techniques are needed to confirm the presence of Lutheran antigens. Because these people have normal
Lutheran genes, just weakened Lutheran antigens, they do not produce Lutheran antibodies except to those
antigens to which they are truly negative. Question contributed by Bill Turcan, June 2015.
McLeod syndrome is associated with the null in a blood group system that has only one antigen. The null
can also result in X-linked chronic granulomatous disease in males. Name that null!
Kx system
MNS system
Kell system
Rh system
I system
The Kx blood group system has only one antigen, Kx, that assists in anchoring the antigens in the Kell blood
group system to the red blood cell membrane. The lack of this antigen results in the McLeod syndrome and a
weakened expression of Kell antigens. The syndrome features a compensated hemolytic anemia (classically
associated with the presence of acanthocytes), elevated serum creatinine kinase, and certain neuromuscular
disorders. There’s a pretty good chance that you were tempted to choose “Kell” here, as McLeod is taught in
association with the Kell system. However, Kx is in fact a separate blood group system, one whose lone
antigen lives next door to the Kell system antigens on the red cell membrane (See the Kell Video for more
information). Question contributed by Bill Turcan, June 2015.
This null produces red blood cells that lack the structures Glycophorin A and Glycophorin B and all antigens
located on those structures. This results in the absence of an entire blood group system in these patients.
Name that null!
Homozygous inheritance of the very rarely seen Mk allele (GYP*01N) will produce red blood cells that lack
Glycophorin A and Glycophorin B. GPA and GPB are the structures that carry the MNS blood group system
antigens, so these patients will not produce antigens such as M,N,S,s and U. The more famous (and more
common) antigen-negative phenotype in this system is the homozygous inheritance of a null allele for
glycophorin B inheritance (GYP*NULL), leading to a complete lack of GPB and the antigens carried by it
(S, s, and U). The S-s-U- phenotype is seen in roughly 1% of African-Americans.
If a patient has a positive antibody screen, a request for a red blood cell (RBC) product transfusion will be
delayed due to the extra testing that is now required to identify the antibody and find compatible RBC’s.
Which of the following antibodies would be most likely to cause the shortest transfusion delay?
Anti-K
Anti-Jk(a)
Anti-E
Anti-s
If a patient has an antibody against a red blood cell antigen, their compatibility with the donor population is
decreased. A patient with a so-called “clinically significant” antibody must receive RBCs that test
(“phenotype”) negatively for the corresponding antigen. An antibody is considered clinically significant if it
can either cause a hemolytic transfusion reaction or hemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn (HDFN).
Such antibodies are usually antibodies of the IgG isotype that cause agglutination at 37C. The lower the
frequency of the antigen in the population, the better chance you have of finding compatible RBC’s for the
patient. In this case the antigen frequencies (in a primarily U.S. Caucasian donor pool) are: K: 9%, Jka:
77%, E: 29%, s: 89%. Since the frequency of K is 9% in these donors, a patient with anti-K is compatible
with 91% of the population.
When a patient makes an immune antibody, red blood cell products are phenotyped and products that are
antigen-negative for the corresponding antibody selected for transfusion. RBC products are already pre-
phenotyped to prevent interactions with one immune antibody. Which antibody is it?
Anti-K
Anti-D
Anti-E
Anti-A
A patient has anti-c. If 80% of donors are c-positive and 68% are C-positive, how many RBC units will the
transfusion service need to test in order to find 2 units that are compatible with the patient?
3 units
4 units
7 units
10 units
18 units
When doing this calculation you need 2 pieces of information, the number of RBC products desired and the
frequency of the corresponding antigen in the population. In this case 2 RBC products are requested. The
frequency of the corresponding antigen, c, is 80%. This means that the patient is compatible with 20% of the
population. The formula for the calculation is:
So, for this case, using the numbers above, the calculation would be:
Note that the C frequency of 68% in the question above is completely irrelevant in your calculations about c-
compatibility. Also please note that frequencies like this may or may not be given on standardized exams
(for pathology board exams, they often are given, but for SBB exams, they usually are NOT given).
If a patient has Anti-c and Anti-S, how many RBC units will the transfusion service need to test in order to
find 2 units that are compatible with the patient?
(Frequency data: c = 80%, C = 68%, s = 90%, S = 55%)
5 units
12 units
22 units
For this question, the same general formula used in the previous question is applicable:
When the patient has more than one antibody, as in this question, you simply multiply the compatibility
frequencies of each antigen to calculate the percentage of RBC units compatible (the numerator of the
calculation above). The frequency of the c antigen is 80% (20% compatible with the patient) and the
frequency of the S antigen is 55% (45% compatible with the patient, so you multiply 0.2 x 0.45, which
equals 0.09. Plugging in that value with the need to find 2 compatible units looks like this:
A patient has a positive antibody screen and positive antibody panel. The patient specimen is retested with
antibody panel cells that have been treated with the enzyme called “ficin.” The antibody panel is now
negative. Which of the following antibodies is most consistent with these results?
Anti-D
Anti-K
Anti-Jk(b)
Anti-Fy(a)
Anti-Le(a)
Ficin is a so-called “proteolytic enzyme” that destroys certain common antigens found on red blood cells.
The antigens are: Fya, Fyb, M, N, S, s, Xga (see image below). If a patient has an antibody against one of
these antigens, the test result will be negative after the reagent red cells are treated with the enzyme, since
there is no longer a target antigen for the antibody. Keep in mind that the patient still has the antibody itself.
The antibody is just not detected using antibody screening cells or antibody panel cells that have been
treated with ficin. One more time, to be clear (because beginners get this confused quite a bit): Blood Bank
enzymes destroy antigens, not antibodies.
A patient has a positive antibody screen and a positive antibody panel. All tested cells are positive 3+ at the
AHG phase of reactivity. The only tested cell that is negative is the autocontrol. You phenotype the patient
and discover that he is negative for the following antigens: E, Fy(a), S, and Jk(b). You locate a testing cell
that has this antigen negative phenotype. The cell reacts 3+ at the AHG phase. Of the following choices,
which is the most likely specificity of the antibody/antibodies?
Allo-anti-k
Auto-anti-k
Allo-anti-E, -Fy(a), -S, -Jk(b)
Allo-anti-E, -Fy(a), -S and auto-anti-Jk(b)
Warm-reacting autoantibody
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Since the autocontrol test was negative, this antibody is not likely to be an autoantibody. However, the
pattern is consistent with at least one alloantibody against a high-frequency antigen. We say this because of
the fact that a phenotypically matched cell is incompatible with the patient’s serum, with a negative
autocontrol. If the patient had multiple antibodies against common antigens (choice C), the cell described in
the question should have been compatible with patient specimen.
The k (“little k”) antigen is present in 99.9% of the population, and blood banks do not routinely include
phenotyping for k in routine testing. As a result, if a person is k-negative and makes anti-k, this is exactly
the way an alloantibody against a high frequency antigen like k would look.
A patient has a positive antibody screen and a positive antibody identification panel. All tested cells are
positive 3+ at the AHG phase of reactivity. The autocontrol is also positive 3+ at the AHG phase. The
patient has never been transfused or pregnant. Which adsorption technique would you use to complete the
case?
Cold alloadsorption
Cold autoadsorption
Warm alloadsorption
Warm autoadsorption
Since the patient has never been exposed to allogeneic red blood cells, the test results indicate the patient has
an autoantibody. You can use an adsorption technique to confirm this panagglutination testing pattern
reactivity. The antibody reacts at the AHG phase of testing. This indicates a warm autoantibody and the
autoadsorption should take place at 37C. Since the patient has not been transfused or pregnant in the last 3
months, you can use the autologous patient cells to conduct the adsorption. The autoadsorption will act to
“soak up” the autoantibody and leave behind serum that can then be used to screen for additional antibodies
(the “left-behind” serum is known as “adsorbed serum“).
A patient with sickle cell disease who was transfused 2 units of red blood cells 2 weeks ago at another
facility presents to your transfusion service for the first time. The clinician is requesting phenotypically
matched red cells. What serologic technique can be used to obtain the patient phenotype in this case?
Wash the patient's red cells with hypotonic saline (0.3%)
Wash the patient's red cells with hypertonic saline (1.2%)
Treat the patient's red cells with the enzyme ficin
Perform a cold-autoadsorption on the patient specimen
Incubate the patient's red cells with chloroquine
Performing a phenotype on a patient who has been recently transfused is a special challenge in the
laboratory. In patients with sickle cell disease, the hypotonic saline wash may be useful. RBCs with
hemoglobin S (HbS) react differently than RBCs with hemoglobin A (HbA) when exposed to hypotonic
(0.3%) saline. Recently transfused RBCs, which contain HbA, will hemolyze in the presence of hypotonic
(0.3%) saline (the interior of the RBC appears hypertonic to the surrounding environment, water rushes in,
You identify an RBC alloantibody in a patient. Your lab performs tube testing with LISS potentiation.
Which antibody would be eligible for antibody screens and crossmatches using the “prewarm technique”?
Anti-E (reacting at 37C and AHG phases)
Anti-S (reacting at AHG phase)
Anti-K (reacting at AHG phase)
Anti-M (reacting at immediate spin phase)
Anti-Le(a) (reacting at AHG phase)
Anti-M is usually an IgM-isotype, cold-reacting antibody that has no clinical significance. Once an antibody
with these characteristics is identified, the laboratory may choose to use the prewarm technique to provide
compatible RBCs for transfusion to the patient. The phrase simply means that all reagents, cells, and serum
are kept at body temperature both before and during the antibody screening or crossmatching procedure. The
prewarm technique allows you to provide RBCs for transfusion to a patient with a cold-reacting antibody
without phenotyping the RBCs for the corresponding antigen. If the antibody in question shows
agglutination at the AHG phase of testing using the prewarm technique, you must provide the patient with
RBCs that are phenotyped for the corresponding antigen against the patient antibody. Anti-M may contain
an IgG component that can cause this problem. NOTE that this technique is only approriate after the
antibody is identified! It is usually poor practice to simply “prewarm away” an unknown cold-reacting
antibody without having an idea of what it is! Some cold-reacting antibodies can have wide thermal
amplitudes and cause significant hemolysis despite being nonreactive with prewarming, so the this technique
should not be used as a substitute for proper antibody identification.
Which of the following antibodies could be identified using a patient specimen collected in a red top tube
(plain glass), but may not be identified if a purple top tube (EDTA anticoagulant) was used for the
collection?
Anti-M
Anti-E
Anti-Fy(a)
Anti-Jk(a)
Anti-Jka is an antibody that can bind complement. Although it is not common, weak reacting Anti-Jka
antibodies may require the presence of complement in the laboratory test in order to be identified. The
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purple top tube contains EDTA, which binds calcium to prevent coagulation of the sample (and prevents
complement from activating at the same time). This may cause you to miss identifying one of these
uncommon complement-binding dependent antibodies.
If you are saying to yourself, “Wait a minute! We use EDTA tubes in our blood bank laboratory. Are we
running the risk of missing one of these uncommon antibodies?,” the answer is, “You are probably missing
them anyway.” Check the anti-human globulin (AHG) reagent you are using for the AHG phase of testing in
your lab. In order to detect a complement binding dependent antibody you must use an AHG reagent that
contains anti-complement (usually anti-C3d). This antibody is found in the “polyspecific” AHG reagent.
This reagent contains both anti-IgG and anti-C3d, allowing you to detect the bound complement. If you are
using monospecific AHG, which only contains anti-IgG, you may not detect this antibody regardless of
whether you use a red or purple top tube. In order to detect a complement dependent antibody, you must use
a specimen collected in a red top (plain glass) tube and polyspecific AHG that contains anti-C3d. This is
usually only done when you have a patient with a suspected antibody that is not detected using routine
testing.
A 70 year old female who is thrombocytopenic due to recent chemotherapy for acute myelogenous leukemia
is scheduled to receive a single unit of apheresis-derived, irradiated, leukocyte-reduced platelets. You walk
in just as the transfusion is about to begin and see that the nurse is about to spike the unit with a standard IV
infusion set connected directly to her left arm. You say:
"No problem"
"Wait a second! This product must be infused through a microaggregate filter"
"Wait a second! This product must be infused through a standard blood filter"
"Wait a second! This product must be infused through a leukocyte reduction filter"
"Wait a second! This product must be washed before it is infused"
Blood products must be administered through special IV tubing known as a “standard blood infusion set.”
These sets can have either one straight line or be “Y-shaped,” but in either case, the component runs through
a standard blood filter that typically has a pore size of about 170 microns (a range of 170-260 microns is
considered “standard”). When you remember that RBCs have a diameter of about 8 microns, you can see
that this filter would only filter out large particles and blood clots, and should do little with the blood
components themselves. Microaggregate filters are not required, they are rarely used. Leukocyte reduction is
done as a part of the apheresis collection process (plus the product was already called “leukocyte reduced”),
so additional leukocyte filtering is not needed. Finally, there is no information in the case presentation to
suggest that washing would be required for this patient.
A “microaggregate” blood filter has an approximate filter screen size of:
170 microns
40 microns
15 microns
10 microns
5 microns
A nurse who is transfusing a patient with two units of red blood cells, one unit of apheresis platelets, and
two units of fresh frozen plasma (FFP) calls you. She says that the hospital materials department is running
short on blood infusion sets, and wants to know if there is any way to minimize the number of sets she uses
while transfusing these products. Which of the following is the best advice?
She can use the same infusion set for up to four hours, for any combination of the products
She must change the set after each product is infused
She may use the same infusion set for all of the products
She must use a blood infusion set for the red cells, but a regular IV set is ok for the platelets and plasma
She must use a different set for each product type (one for RBCs, one for platelets, one for FFP)
OK, so the easy part is this: All blood components (even platelets and plasma) must be infused through a
filter, and regular IV sets do not come with a filter. So, choice D is not acceptable. Every manufacturer of
standard blood filters has their own set of rules in their package insert, but in general, you can use the same
set for multiple products up to a maximum of 4 hours. Most manufacturers do not require the user to change
the infusion set after each product, and most allow multiple different products to be infused through the
same set.
Fill in the blanks: In general, red blood cell transfusions should start at a flow rate of approximately __
mL/minute for the first __ minutes of the transfusion.
2 mL/min; 5 minutes
2 mL/min; 15 minutes
5 mL/min; 15 minutes
5 mL/min; 30 minutes
10 mL/min; 5 minutes
Manifestations of many (not all) severe complications of transfusion are seen within the first 15-20 minutes
of transfusion. This includes symptoms of acute hemolytic, anaphylactic, and septic transfusion reactions.
As a result, transfusions of all blood products should start slowly for the first 15 minutes or so, and the blood
recipient should be closely monitored. There are various recommendations, but in general, starting at 2
ml/min for the first 15 minutes is reasonable for all products. After that time, the transfusion can be given as
rapidly as the patient will tolerate it (but always within 4 hours!). RBC transfusions typically are tolerated
well at about 4-5 ml/min, which means that an average-sized unit (300-350 ml) will be completed in 90
minutes or so (including the slower first 15 minutes).
This scenario illustrates why transfusion services are reluctant to issue more than one unit at a time for use
by a single patient. The rule of transfusion time limits is simple: From the time the unit leaves monitored
storage, it must be transfused within 4 hours! This is true whether there is one or ten other units issued at the
same time (you don’t get extra time if you take more units!). In most patients, this is pretty simple, but this
patient has volume overload potential, so both units might not be infused in four hours. One little clue to
how some try to get creative with this: It is NOT COOL for clinical staff to try to game the system by
putting units in unmonitored refrigerators or non-blood bank supplied coolers! Unless your facility is one of
the few that is set up with transfusion service-monitored storage units, PLEASE don’t allow anyone to put
blood in a regular refrigerator!
A unit of red blood cells is signed out of the transfusion service at 9:00 am, to be given to an oncology
patient who has come in to the facility for an outpatient transfusion. At 9:45 am, the nurse responsible for
the transfusion calls to report that the patient’s initial IV has blown, and that the staff are having a very hard
time re-establishing access. The nurse, a regular blood donor, does not want the unit to go to waste, so she
asks you for help. She states that the unit still feels cool to the touch. Which of the following statements is
the MOST LIKELY to be your advice?
Don't bring the unit back; just finish the transfusion within 4 hours if possible
Don't bring the unit back; just finish the transfusion within 6 hours if possible
Throw the unit into the trash and come get a new one as it is compromised
Return the unit to the transfusion service where it will be accepted into inventory
Return the unit to the transfusion service where its temperature will be taken and a decision made
There is no specific standard from either the AABB or the FDA regarding how long a unit of blood can be
out of monitored storage until it can no longer be accepted back into inventory. The regulation that does
apply here is that units of red cells must stay at a temperature less than 10C when they are shipped. Each
facility is required to set up its own time limit, based on that maximum temperature value, and validate that
limit by testing what actually happens (i.e., how long does it take a unit to exceed 10C in that specific
facility). By far, the most common limit that transfusion services arrive at is 30 minutes (this is the so-called
“30 minute rule”). There’s nothing magical about 30 minutes; it’s just a number that people have used since
a study was published showing that units of RBCs set on a counter at room temperature take about that long
to exceed 10C). So, most facilities end up with a 30 minute limit beyond which the unit will be discarded if
returned. But, the time limit to transfuse the unit is 4 hours from when it leaves the transfusion service! As a
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result, if the unit came back to the transfusion service, it would likely be discarded, but if it is transfused, it’s
all good as long as it is infused within 4 hours! That leads to choice A as the most likely advice you would
give to our conscientious nurse. IMPORTANT NOTE: Remember, the “30 minute rule” is not actually a
rule at all! Each facility must validate their own time limit. Inspectors will cite facilities that say, “Oh, we
just use the ’30 minute rule'” without any additional thought.
Which of the following is a TRUE statement regarding the administration of blood products?
Blood warmers are required for patients with cold agglutinin disease
Blood issued in syringes for neonates does NOT need to be filtered at the bedside
Granulocytes from a CMV-positive donor should be leukocyte-reduced before transfusion
After identifying the patient and starting the transfusion, it is acceptable to remove the "bag tag" from the
unit
The bag and infusion set must be returned to the transfusion service after the transfusion is complete
When transfusion services prepare an aliquot of blood for a neonatal transfusion with a syringe, they
generally filter the product before placing it in the syringe (often through a built-in filter in the syringe kit).
As a result, the blood need not be filtered again before administration (especially since the syringe aliquot
expires in 4 hours, giving little time for clot formation). Note: Check with your facility to ensure that this is
how they operate. The remaining statements are false. Blood warmers may be used in patients with cold
agglutinins, theoretically to decrease the risk of hemolysis from the receipt of “cold blood,” but their use in
that situation is not required (nor is the benefit proven). Granulocyte concentrates (composed of
“leukocytes”) should never be “leukocyte-reduced!” Think about it for a second…yeah, it doesn’t make
sense, does it? The bag tag and all identifying information should always stay attached to the unit, even after
properly identifying the patient and unit. Finally, while some facilities choose to require the return of the bag
after transfusion, there is no regulation that mandates the practice.
Which of the following is an acceptable solution to be infused in the same intravenous line with a blood
component?
0.45% USP saline
5% dextrose in water (D5W)
Lactated Ringer's Solution
Normosol-R (pH 7.4)
Vancomycin solution
OK, so here’s the deal: The best solution to run in the same line with a blood component is normal saline
(0.9% USP). Everything else is not as good, and some non-approved things may be harmful. Hypotonic
solutions like 0.45% (half-normal) saline and dextrose-only solutions will cause RBC destruction for
osmotic reasons (the RBCs appear hypertonic, so fluid rushes in and bursts the cell). Drugs (including
antibiotics like vancomycin), total parenteral nutrition (TPN) supplements, or other medications can also
damage the blood component. Lactated Ringer’s (LR) is a terrible solution to put in the same line with blood
A 65 year old female with gram-negative sepsis secondary to a ruptured colon is receiving a red cell
transfusion. Her temperature has been fluctuating wildly between 37C up to a maximum of 39.6C for the
past 8 hours. Prior to the start of the transfusion, her temperature is 38C. Thirty minutes into the transfusion,
however, her temperature is 39.5C. She does not appear agitated, and her other vital signs are unchanged.
What is the FIRST thing that the person responsible for infusing the blood should do?
Order a gram stain of the unit, as it was likely contaminated
Request a transfusion reaction workup from the blood bank
Stop the transfusion
Consult with infectious disease for an antibiotic change
Request that the attending physician come to evaluate the patient STAT
While all of the other options are things that might be done, the most important (and FIRST) step that the
person administering the transfusion should take is to STOP THE TRANSFUSION! This is a difficult and
complicated scenario, one that will most likely take a while to evaluate. The history of a fever before the
transfusion does not eliminate the possibility that the patient may have a fever now for a different reason! If
the unit was mismatched in the blood bank or at the bedside, or if there is any other undetected
incompatibility or contamination of the unit, the WORST thing the transfusionist could do is continue to
infuse the blood into the patient. First, stop the transfusion, keep the line open with saline, and THEN call
for help to figure out the whole situation. I always recommend to blood bank staff ask if the transfusion has
been stopped before embarking on a workup. NOTE: I acknowledge that in urgent situations, the need to
infuse blood in a complex patient with fluctuating temperatures such as this may trump the evaluation of
every temperature increase. I just don’t believe that you can ignore the first spike. In these situations, blood
banks can work with clinical teams to rule out significant issues quickly so that the transfusion can continue.
Which of the following is TRUE about premedication of patients before they receive transfusion?
Premedication is required by AABB Standards
Premedication is very beneficial in most cases
Premedication reliably masks fever from an acute hemolytic reaction
Premedication with diphenhydramine and prednisone is most common
Premedication is not an effective way to prevent reactions
Premedication of transfusion recipients became popular a number of years ago as an attempt to reduce the
incidence of benign transfusion reactions such as febrile nonhemolytic and mild allergic (urticarial)
reactions. Typically, patients would be given 325 mg of acetaminophen and 25-50 mg of diphenhydramine
A 39 year old female with a history of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) has received numerous platelet
transfusions in the past three days, with no measurable increase in her platelet count from approximately
10,000/mcL. Which of the following would least likely to contribute to her lack of response?
She is febrile to 39.1C
She is O negative and has received O positive platelets
She is O negative and has received A negative platelets
She has an enlarged spleen
She has delivered six children
Rh incompatibility does not affect how well a patient responds to a platelet transfusion, because there are no
Rh antigens on platelets. Even if this patient formed anti-D, that antibody would not affect the response to
platelet transfusion. Fever and splenomegaly are well-known contributors to a decreased response to platelet
transfusion. Platelets DO have ABO antigens on their surface, so a group A platelet transfusion to a group O
recipient (who has anti-A) would not be expected to have an optimal response. Finally, pregnancy (with
delivery) is an excellent stimulator of HLA antibodies, which may directly lead to platelet refractoriness.
A 14 year old boy has a hemoglobin level of 6.9 g/dL following a spinal fusion surgery. He has a
documented history of IgA deficiency and his mother reports that he had a “serious reaction” to a previous
transfusion. Assuming that you have all of the following readily available in your Blood Bank, which is the
best choice?
Red blood cells, leukocyte reduced
Red blood cells, irradiated
Red blood cells, pooled
Red blood cells, deglycerolized
Red blood cells, unmodified
This is the kind of annoying question that you should expect to see on standardized exams. When you read
this question, the answer that you WANT to choose is “Red blood cells, washed” (because you remember
that washing removes IgA, which could cause this poor young man to have an anaphylactic transfusion
reaction). BUT, “washed RBC’s” is not a choice! Remember that deglycerolized RBCs are essentially to
washed RBCs, because washing to remove the glycerol in a previously frozen unit removes essentially all of
the plasma, too. Blood from an IgA-deficient donor is also acceptable. None of the other interventions
Individuals who are group O may only receive group O red cells. Think about it; they have anti-A and anti-
B, so transfusion of cells carrying either of those antigens would lead to destruction of the cells. Since an O-
negative patient, by definition, lacks A or B antigens on their own red cells, they can receive plasma from
any donor, including the AB and B plasma donors listed in the question (also remember that group AB FFP
can be given to anyone due to its lack of anti-A and anti-B). Rh is not a consideration with FFP, and should
not be a major consideration in red cell transfusions in the emergency setting above (especially for a male),
but future transfusions might be affected by development of an anti-D from transfusion of Rh-positive red
cells. Out-of-group platelet transfusions (choice B) are generally acceptable in adult recipients.
Which of the following is the correct relative order for shelf life of these blood products, from shortest to
longest?
AS-3 red cells < Thawed Cryoprecipitate < Irradiated red cells < Apheresis platelets < Frozen PF24 <
Granulocytes
Granulocytes < Thawed Cryoprecipitate < AS-3 red cells < Apheresis platelets < Frozen PF24 < Irradiated
red cells
Thawed Cryoprecipitate < Granulocytes < Apheresis platelets < Irradiated red cells < AS-3 red cells
< Frozen PF24
Granulocytes < Apheresis platelets < Thawed Cryoprecipitate < AS-3 red cells < Frozen PF24 < Irradiated
red cells
Irradiated red cells < Granulocytes < Thawed Cryoprecipitate < Apheresis platelets < AS-3 red cells <
Frozen PF24
Thawed cryoprecipitate has a 6 hour shelf life (4 hours if pooled under open conditions). Granulocytes have
a 24 hour shelf life. Apheresis platelets expire 5 days after collection (7 days with very specific testing
restrictions). Irradiated red cells expire either a maximum of 28 days from irradiation or at the time when
they were going to expire before they were irradiated (42 days after collection with additive solution
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preservation). AS-3 red cells expire 42 days after collection. Finally, frozen PF24 expires one year from the
collection date.
A 55 year old male has a gastrointestinal hemorrhage. A bleeding arteriovenous malformation in the sigmoid
colon is identified and resected, and the patient stabilizes. His hemoglobin is 5.4 g/dL. The clinician calls
you to ask about the expected post-transfusion hemoglobin if he gives the patient 4 units of red blood cells.
You say:
Approximately 6.6 g/dL
Approximately 7.4 g/dL
Approximately 8.2 g/dL
Approximately 9.4 g/dL
Approximately 11.4 g/dL
This is admittedly a somewhat silly question, but bear with me on it, OK? My point here is for you to
recognize that in an average-sized person, in the absence of bleeding, each unit of red cells should raise the
hemoglobin approximately 1 g/dL (or hematocrit approximately 3%). If the patient is bleeding, hemolyzing,
larger than average, or smaller than average, however, the prediction will probably not be accurate.
Obviously, this is nothing more than a useful approximation.
A nurse calls the blood bank about the designation “leukocyte-reduced” on a unit of platelets. Her patient is
a 56 year old male who had an allogeneic stem cell transplant two weeks ago. She asks you why this patient
should receive leukocyte-reduced platelets. Which is the best response?
Everyone gets leukocyte-reduced now; don't worry about it!
This modification will help prevent transfusion-associated graft vs host disease
This modification will help prevent hemolytic transfusion reactions
This modification will completely prevent transmission of cytomegalovirus
This modification will help prevent febrile transfusion reactions
Reduction of the transfused white blood cell load is broadly accepted for three main indications:
Prevention of febrile non-hemolytic transfusion reactions
Prevention of HLA alloimmunization
Prevention (mostly, but not completely) of cytomegalovirus (CMV) transmission
Leukocyte reduction does not help with prevention of acute hemolytic reactions (typically caused by clerical
or administration error). Transfusion-associated graft vs. host disease (TA-GVHD) is a brutal, usually fatal
complication of blood transfusion that is caused by viable transfused T-lymphoctes, and the patient
described in this case is at risk. However, since no one knows the minimum number of T-lymphs that may
cause TA-GVHD, it may NOT be prevented by leukocyte reduction. As a result, irradiation is the proper
In the United States, fresh frozen plasma (FFP) made from whole blood must be placed in the freezer within
how many hours after collection?
2 hours
4 hours
6 hours
8 hours
24 hours
48 hours
In order to best preserve labile coagulation factors (V and VIII especially) and meet the standard U.S.
definition of the product, whole blood-derived plasma must be placed in the freezer within 8 hours in order
to be eligible for the name “FFP” (the interval is a little bit less, 6 hours, for plasma collected in ACD
preservative during apheresis procedures).
A new blood center medical director is evaluating quality control requirements for various blood products
made at her facility. Which of the following is TRUE regarding the requirements for fresh frozen plasma in
the United States?
There are no QC requirements for FFP in the United States
All FFP units tested must contain at least 400 mg of fibrinogen
All FFP units tested must contain at least 80 IU of factor VIII
All FFP units tested must contain at least 1 IU/mL of all coagulation factors
95% of FFP units tested must contain less than 5.0 x 10^6 white blood cells
Surprisingly (given the requirements for most blood products), there are no specific requirements for quality
control testing of FFP in the United States from either the FDA or AABB (this is not true outside of the
U.S.). Several of the above statements are generally true, however, including that FFP contains about 400
mg of fibrinogen and about 1 IU/ml of all other coagulation factors. The white blood cell number is the
definition of “leukocyte-reduced” blood products in the U.S., but most centers do not specify that plasma
units are leukocyte-reduced (WBCs in plasma are generally considered non-viable due to their poor survival
of the freezing/thawing process).
“Normal” platelets circulate for approximately 9-10 days in a healthy individual. This range, however, may
be dramatically reduced in situations of bleeding, consumption, and autoantibody formation. Of near equal
importance is the fact that simply having a low platelet count (below 50,000 or so) decreases the circulating
lifespan of a platelet, as a higher proportion of the platelets are used for baseline maintenance of vascular
integrity and in response to vascular challenges. Also note that the lifespan of an individual platelet does not
equate to the storage interval (“shelf life”) for a unit of platelets for transfusion.
For whole blood-derived platelets (WBD Platelets), which of the following shelf life intervals is correct?
Pooled WBD platelets (open system): 24 hours
Pooled WBD platelets (closed system): 5 days
Irradiated WBD platelets: 24 hours
Washed WBD platelets: 6 hours
Leukocyte-reduced WBD platelets: 7 days
WBD platelets have similar shelf life requirements as apheresis-derived platelets. Any product modified in
an open system (by pooling or washing, for example) receives a shortened shelf life. For WBD platelets (or
any product stored at 20-24C), the shelf life drops to 4 hours. However, the shelf life of products modified in
a closed system is not affected (choice B). Irradiation does not affect shelf life unless the product is normally
stored for more than 28 days, so WBD platelets are not impacted. Finally, leukocyte reduction is done under
aseptic conditions, but it alone cannot extend a 5 day platelet product to 7 days of storage.
A 66-year-old female suffers a motor vehicle accident outside of Pittsburgh. As part of her resuscitation, she
receives several units of pooled whole blood-derived platelets (with four individual units in each pool).
Which of the following statements is most accurate about pooled whole blood-derived platelet concentrate?
It is the platelet product most commonly used in the U.S.
It is more expensive than apheresis-derived platelets
It is expected to give an equivalent numeric response to apheresis-derived platelets
It carries a higher risk of anti-HLA antibody formation than apheresis-derived platelets
It carries a higher risk of bacterial contamination than apheresis-derived platelets
The relative merits of apheresis-derived (AD) and whole blood-derived (WBD) platelets have been debated
for years among blood bankers. The “battle,” however, has long been decided in favor of AD-platelets, as
over 85% of U.S. platelet transfusions are with AD-platelets. However, as Dr. Mark Yazer pointed out in a
BBGuy Essentials Podcast, it might be time for us to look at WBD platelets again. Let no one fool you:
WBD platelets are less expensive, cost less (generally), have equivalent hemostatic and numeric (platelet
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count) effects, equivalent risk of HLA antibody induction, and the same risk of bacterial contamination (see
the podcast referenced above for that discussion) as AD platelets.
A blood center collects whole blood from a donor, separates the plasma by centrifugation, and places that
plasma product in the freezer. If the product is placed in the freezer at 23 hours after collection, which TWO
coagulation factors would you be expecting to decline most rapidly in comparison to plasma in the freezer at
7.5 hours?
Fibrinogen
Factor V
Factor VII
Factor VIII
Factor IX
von Willebrand Factor (vWF)
In stored blood, the two factors that degrade most rapidly are factors V and VIII (factor VII, while it
degrades very rapidly in the body, is more stable in storage conditions). As a result, the requirement to
freeze plasma quickly when it will be used for transfusion comes from a concern about the viability of these
two factors, and led to the emphasis on getting plasma into the freezer within 8 hours (“fresh frozen plasma”
or FFP). This is not as big a deal as we used to think, since products such as “Plasma frozen within 24
hours” (PF24) retain plenty of these labile factors to be effective. In fact, while we still say that factors V
and VIII are the “labile coagulation factors,” some studies (such as one quoted in the AABB Circular of
Information) show that there is no significant difference in factor V content between “8 hour max before
freezer” FFP and “24 hour max before freezer” PF24 (Note that the same study showed that the
anticoagulant Protein C is likewise significantly decreased in PF24).
A 25-year-old A, Rh-negative male is given a single unit of A, Rh-positive red blood cells while being
treated for major injuries from a bicycle accident. He stabilizes immediately after the transfusion and does
not receive additional D-positive units. The trauma anesthesiologist is a former Clinical Lab Scientist, and
he asks you the risk that this patient will form anti-D. You say:
Less than 5%
About 20%
About 50%
About 80%
Nearly 100%
The D antigen is the most immunogenic (antibody-inducing) non-ABO red cell antigen. Healthy people who
are D-negative and are exposed to this antigen via transfusion have historically been considered quite likely
to form an antibody; approximately 80% for a full unit exposure. However, newer data supports the fact that
in hospital settings, the number is closer to 20%. Incidentally, the risk is not significantly different if the
FILL IN THE BLANKS: Each unit of platelets collected by apheresis (apheresis-derived platelets) should
contain at least ________ platelets, while units of whole blood-derived platelets should have at least
________.
3.0 x 10^11; 5.5 x 10^10
3.0 x 10^11; 3.0 x 10^10
5.5 x 10^10; 3.0 x 10^10
3.5 x 10^11; 5.5 x 10^10
1.0 x 10^11; 3.0 x 10^10
Yes, I understand that this question is not fun. No, I don’t feel badly about asking it. Yes, you can expect to
see questions that expect you to know this level of detail on standardized examinations! These numbers are
part of standard quality control requirements for centers collecting these products, and these minimum
thresholds must be met in 90% of all such products tested.
A 15 year old male is undergoing spinal surgery, and the family requests directed donor blood from an older
sibling and an uncle. Of the following interventions, which is the MOST IMPORTANT that the blood bank
should perform prior to issuing this blood?
Irradiate the units
Wash the units
Perform HLA crossmatch on the unit
Leukocyte-reduce the unit
Premedicate the recipient
Transfusions from family members are more likely to be from donors who fairly closely match the HLA
type of the recipient. In particular, if the donor is HLA-homozygous and the recipient shares one HLA
haplotype, this is known as the “one-way HLA match.” In this setting, an HLA-heterozygous recipient may
not recognize the transfused T-lymphocytes from an HLA-homozygous donor as foreign, so the donor T-
lymphocytes can potentially proliferate unchecked and cause Transfusion-associated Graft-vs-Host Disease
(TA-GVHD). You can find a more detailed explanation in the “Why do we irradiate” video. Irradiation does
a really good job of inactivating transfused T-lymphocytes and rendering them incapable of attacking the
recipient’s tissues and essentially eliminates the risk of TA-GVHD.
Which of the following is the transfusion complication that causes the MOST reported deaths in the United
States per year?
Post-transfusion Hepatitis C infection
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Post-transfusion Hepatitis B infection
Post-transfusion HIV infection
Acute Hemolytic Transfusion Reactions
Transfusion-related Acute Lung Injury
Bacterial contamination of transfused blood products
This one is just to see if you are paying attention! Even though we are in the transfusion-transmitted
infection section, you should be aware that TRALI is known to cause more deaths than any of the other
entities listed (this is borne out in the FDA-reported fatality statistics site, where you can view the annual
reports and see that TRALI is the reported cause of more transfusion fatalities than any other entity).
Which of the following is NOT a feature or disease associated with Human T-cell Lymphotropic Virus
(HTLV-I/II) infections in at least some circumstances?
No symptoms whatsoever
Transfusion transmission through cells and not plasma
Mycosis fungoides
Tropical spastic paraparesis
Adult T-cell Leukemia/Lymphoma
Interestingly, though blood banks have been required to test for HTLV for more than 20 years, everyone
recognizes that actual HTLV infection is usually not a huge clinical problem. The vast majority (over 99%)
of truly infected patients never have symptoms. However, the rare patients that do so may get diseases that
sound pretty nasty. Adult T-cell Leukemia/Lymphoma (ATL) is associated with HTLV-1 infection, and
HTLV-associated myelopathy (HAM) (as “tropical spastic paraparesis” is better known today) is associated
with both HTLV-1 and HTLV-2 infections (though the association with HTLV-2 is less firmly established).
Both are serious illnesses, but they happen rarely. It is also interesting to note that due to near-universal
leukocyte reduction of cellular blood products before transfusion, the risk of HTLV infection is thought to
be significantly lower today than in days past (the current estimate of risk of HTLV transmission is
approximately 1 in 4,000,000 transfusions).
Which of the following is true regarding cytomegalovirus (CMV) transmission through donated blood?
Leukocyte reduction of blood products does not lessen the risk of CMV transmission
Most adults have severe flu-like symptoms when infected with CMV
Testing for CMV antibodies is required for all platelet donors
CMV transmission is reduced by irradiation of blood products
CMV may cause severe disease in transplant recipients
Which of the following is NOT currently a test that must be performed on all donated blood in the United
States?
Anti-Hepatitis B core antigen (anti-HBc)
Anti-Hepatitis B surface antigen (anti-HBsAg)
Nucleic Acid Test for West Nile Virus (WNV NAT)
Anti-Human T-cell Lymphotrophic Virus (Anti-HTLV-I/II)
Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus 2 (anti-HIV-2)
The test for the Hepatitis B surface antigen itself (HBsAg) and not the antibody test (anti-HBsAg) is
required. If we did anti-HBsAg on every donor, then everyone who has been vaccinated for Hepatitis B
would end up being deferred! The remaining tests are all required (including anti-HIV-2, which is done in
combination with anti-HIV-1).
Which of the following transfusion-transmitted hepatitis viruses is most commonly associated with
chronic/carrier-state infections?
Hepatitis A virus
Hepatitis B virus
Hepatitis C virus
Hepatitis D virus (delta agent)
Hepatitis G virus
HCV is famously and classically associated not only with chronic hepatitis (seen in about 75% of cases), but
also with infections with a very long latent period between infection and clinical symptoms. Public health
officials have made great efforts to try to get people at risk for HCV (previous transfusion recipients,
clotting factor recipients, and IV drug users, especially) tested for the virus. Unfortunately, the majority of
U.S. blood donors are tested for all of the following infectious diseases with a required test using enzyme
immunoassay (EIA) or chemiluminescent immunoassay (ChLIA) technology EXCEPT:
Chagas disease
Hepatitis C Virus
Hepatitis B Virus
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
West Nile Virus
All of these agents are detected using EIA or ChLIA technology (which are very similar and used for
basically the same tests, just on different testing platforms). Note that for HIV, HBV, and HIV, nucleic acid
testing (NAT) is also used in addition to EIA/ChLIA. Both EIA and ChLIA are very sensitive and quite
specific as well, making them useful for screening blood donors. Unfortunately, due to the low levels of
actual disease in our blood donors, we see false positive reactions from these tests, as well, despite the high
specificity. West Nile Virus in U.S. blood donors is detected only through NAT.
Which of the following is the most accurate description of the “window period” for a particular potentially
transfusion-transmitted organism?
The time from exposure to the organism until the appearance of clinical symptoms
The time from infection until the appearance of clinical symptoms
The time from infection until laboratory detection of the organism
The time from entry into the cell until the appearance of infectious virus in the cell
The time from exposure until the detection of virus by nucleic acid testing
The window period is the time during which one of the viruses that we spend so much time worrying about
(like HIV or HCV) is most likely to transmitted to a patient. The window period has a very specific
definition: The time from actual infection to the time that the infection is detectable on laboratory testing.
This definition is very similar to the “incubation period” which is the period between exposure to the
organism to the onset of actual clinical symptoms, and may be longer or shorter than the window period.
Two other choices represent the “latent phase” (choice A) and the “eclipse phase” (choice D). The last
option, though similar to window period and incubation period, is too specific for either and does not meet
the definition.
Which of the following statements MOST ACCURATELY describes current blood donor testing for Chagas
disease in the United States?
Screening is done by a combination of a question and a blood test
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Most of the blood transfused in the United States is from donors who have NOT been tested for Chagas
disease
All donors must be tested for Chagas disease at every donation
The approved confirmatory test is a recombinant immunoblot assay (RIBA)
A donor testing repeatedly reactive for Chagas on one donation is eligible for re-entry
Donors have been permanently deferred based on their report of a history of Chagas disease for many years,
but since late 2006, blood centers have had the ability to test donors for antibodies to Trypanosoma cruzi
(the parasite that causes the disease) using an EIA test. Despite this ability, until recently, neither the FDA or
the AABB mandated Chagas testing. However, an FDA guidance in December 2010 changed that.
According to that guidance, blood collection facilities may elect to use selective, one-test-per-lifetime
testing of donors rather than testing every donor every time, and this is the strategy of almost all centers. The
approved confirmatory test for anti-T.cruzi is an enzyme strip immunoassay, not RIBA (which, as
mentioned above, is the now-discontinued method of confirming anti-HCV results). Finally, if a donor tests
repeatedly reactive with the approved EIA screen even one time, he/she is indefinitely deferred. As of now,
there is no re-entry protocol defined by the FDA.
Which of the following infectious disease screening tests is matched correctly with its appropriate United
States confirmatory test?
Anti-HBc: Neutralization by soluble HBc antigen
Anti-HIV-1,2: Immunofluorescent assay (IFA)
Anti-HCV: Western blot (WB)
HBsAg: Recombinant immunoprecipitation assay (RIPA)
Anti-HTLV-I/II: Chemiluminescent Immunoassay
Anti-HBc: No confirmatory test.
Anti-HCV: Historically, “recombinant immunoblot assay” or RIBA. However, RIBA is not currently
manufactured in the U.S., and it is therefore not available for anti-HCV confirmation. As a result, most
blood donor testing labs will take a specimen testing in a repeatedly reactive manner and re-run it using a
different manufacturer’s anti-HCV test as a way of “confirmation,” and blood collection establishments use
that information to determine whether “lookback” is required for an anti-HCV result.
HBSAg: Neutralization performed by adding anti-HBsAg to the sample before re-running the test to detect
HBsAg. The antibody should “neutralize” the HBsAg, making the result at least 50% less strong than
originally seen.
Anti-HTLV-I/II: For years, no confirmatory test, but now the U.S. FDA has approved a western blot for use
to confirm repeat reactive anti-HTLV-I/II results.
You may not have liked answer B, remembering (correctly) that “western blot” was traditionally used as the
confirmatory test for reactive anti-HIV EIA/ChLIA tests. However, immunofluorescent assay (IFA) is an
alternate, acceptable confirmatory test for anti-HIV (and many facilities prefer it, as it may give fewer
“indeterminate” results). The rest of the choices are incorrect, as follows:
A donor’s blood sample is being tested for anti-HBc via enzyme immunoassay (EIA). The test has a result
that is just over the cutoff for positivity. A newly trained (but competent) technologist repeats the test in
duplicate, and finds that both of the repeated tests have results that are just under the cutoff for positivity.
Which of the following is TRUE?
His blood can be used for transfusion
He is permanently deferred from blood donation
His results are reported as repeat reactive
The testing equipment is most likely malfunctioning
The technologist was wrong to repeat the testing
This is a description of how initially reactive EIA/ChLIA results are correctly handled. Despite the tech
being new, he or she did exactly the right thing! A result of initially reactive should lead to the test being
repeated on the sample in duplicate. If both of the repeat tests have non-reactive results, then the entire test
is reported as “non-reactive” and there are no consequences to the donor or the availability of the donor’s
blood for transfusion. If, however, either or both of the repeat tests are reactive, then the donor’s results are
“repeat reactive” and several things happen: First, the donated blood will not be used for transfusion;
second, the donor will be deferred for an appropriate time (dependent on the test involved and whether or
not the donor has had previous reactive results); and third, previous recipients of blood products from the
donor may need to be notified (depending on confirmatory results, if applicable, and the disease marker that
is repeat reactive).
A blood donor has a reactive discriminatory nucleic acid test (NAT) for HIV, but a non-reactive anti-HIV-
1,2 enzyme immunoassay test (EIA). Which of the following best describes his donor status and chances of
donating again?
He is permanently deferred without the possibility of donating again
He is indefinitely deferred without the possibility of donating again
He is indefinitely deferred but may be retested for future donation no sooner than 8 weeks from his
original donation date
According to an FDA guidance from 2010, donors with a reactive discriminatory NAT for HIV but a
negative EIA/ChLIA will be “indefinitely” deferred but may be considered for re-entry testing no sooner
than 8 weeks from the donation date. “Indefinite” deferral sounds a lot like “permanent deferral,” but it is
slightly looser (see the definition here). Please note that donor centers are not forced to offer this re-entry
testing; it is done at the discretion of the facility’s medical director, and some do not choose to allow it. The
same opportunity for re-entry is true for donors who test in the same way for hepatitis C virus (reactive NAT
but negative anti-HCV); the difference is that for HCV re-entry, the waiting period is 6 months rather than 8
weeks. Finally, testing performed outside of blood donor testing labs is wonderful and happy news for the
donor, but it has no bearing on the donor’s status. Re-entry testing must be performed in (or at least
managed by) an accredited blood donor testing laboratory.
In the United States, which of the following donor testing results would by law lead to notification and
recommended disease testing of recipients of previously donated blood from the tested donor (“lookback”)?
Repeat reactive anti-HIV-1,2 EIA with indeterminate western blot
Reactive individual donor multiplex NAT with reactive discriminatory HCV NAT but not HIV or
HBV
Repeat reactive anti-HCV EIA with nonreactive anti-HCV on a second testing platform
Repeat reactive anti-HBc (second occurrence)
Reactive HBV NAT with repeat reactive HBsAg
Lookback is a process designed to identify patients who are at increased risk of transfusion-transmitted
disease as a result of getting blood from a previously negative-testing donor who is now reactive for a
particular organism. FDA sets up these criteria, and they are in fact federal law for notification of donors
with positive HIV and HCV results. However, for EIA testing (choices A and C), lookback is only required
for confirmed positive results. Choice A would not trigger lookback because the result is indeterminate.
Choice C is more tricky. Remember, RIBA is the historical confirmatory test for anti-HCV, but it is no
longer available in the U.S., so if a center has received approval to use testing on a different platform to
manage repeat reactive anti-HCV results, this donor’s nonreactive anti-HCV on that platform would not
trigger lookback, either. For choice B, lookback is required by FDA in this uncommon situation even though
this donor almost certainly had a false positive test. The lookback period extends to one year from the
current donation. Finally, there is no law defining lookback for results for hepatitis B testing. As a results,
repeat reactive anti-HBc results do not trigger a lookback (though any remaining blood products in
inventory would be removed, recipients of previous donations are not automatically tested for hepatitis B).
While most blood centers would notify recipients of blood collected 1 year before the most recent
negative donation for the donor mentioned in choice E, there is again, no law that requires that process.
This donor indeed has experienced what is almost certainly a “false positive” multiplex NAT (technically,
the donor result is described as “Non-discriminated reactive”). In fact, the FDA allows blood centers to
counsel donors in this situation that they are not infected, and that their results were likely false positive.
However, the FDA also says that these donors must be deferred for at least six months (though centers may
elect to defer them permanently). After six months has passed, the donor may be allowed (at the discretion
of the center) to begin donating again, without having any qualifying testing done first. Under previous
rules, donors in this situation were deferred permanently, but this strategy was outlined by the FDA in
guidances from 2010 and 2012. Note that this situation only applies if the test was an individual donation
(non-pooled) multiplex NAT rather than a mini-pooled NAT. In mini-pooled NAT, if individual samples are
negative, the donor is not deferred at all.
Which of the following U.S. blood donors would be permanently or indefinitely deferred from donating
blood in the future, with NO possibility of re-entry under current guidelines?
A 4-gallon donor who tests positively for anti-HBc on two occasions
A first-time donor who tests positively for anti-HTLV-I/II by EIA
A two-time previous donor with reactive anti-HIV-1,2 testing and a negative western blot
A platelet donor with non-reactive anti-HIV-1,2 but a positive HIV-1 nucleic acid test (NAT)
A first-time donor with repeat reactive anti-HBc and HBsAg, and a negative HBV NAT
Let’s take these one by one. Before 2010, a two-time anti-HBc-reactive donor was permanently deferred,
without possibility of re-entry. FDA, however, changed that with a 2010 guidance for re-entry for these
donors. TWO reactive anti-HTLV screening tests (not one) are required before a donor is permanently
deferred for anti-HTLV (Note: Now that a confirmatory test for anti-HTLV is approved by the FDA, a
positive confirmatory result would lead to permanent deferral, regardless of whether the anti-HTLV test was
the first or second that had occurred). A negative western blot following a reactive anti-HIV screen means
that the donor MAY be tested for re-entry eight weeks from the date of the donation (this is not automatic.
Individual facilities can choose to do this or to simply permanently defer someone in this situation). Many
find choice D surprising; a donor with a positive HIV-1 NAT alone may be re-entered, by current FDA
requirements (like choice C, at the discretion of the facility medical director); see the FDA guidance from
2010. Donors who test repeatedly reactive for both anti-HBc and HBsAg are permanently deferred,
regardless of the HBV NAT result or the HBsAg confirmatory neutralization test.
This donor illustrates several principles of WNV disease, testing, and donor management. First, his
presentation with “West Nile Fever” is actually a little bit unusual, since 80% of those with WNV are
completely asymptomatic. The good news for him is that of the 20% who are symptomatic, nearly all have a
mild, self-limited illness, and very few actually progress to more severe disease such as
meningoencephalitis. WNV testing is done year-round, despite the fact that infections happen pretty much
only in the summer and fall, making choice D incorrect. It is done using nucleic acid testing (NAT), not EIA
or the similar chemiluminescent immunoassay (ChLIA). Despite his diagnosis, notification of previous
recipients is actually not required by FDA. Collection facilities are required to quarantine and retrieve all in-
date blood products collected up to 120 days before the positive donation and 120 days after the donation.
While any units found in that search will be destroyed, FDA only requires that a facility “consider”
notification of recipients (it’s a surprising amount of leeway from the FDA, actually). Finally, his donor
status: He is deferred for 120 days from the date of his clinical diagnosis, since it is later than the date of his
donation that gave a positive test. After that time, he can resume donating at the discretion of the facility
medical director.
Platelet contamination with gram-positive skin flora is by far the most likely of these scenarios. Numbers
vary, but many accept that there is about a 1 in 3000 unit risk of bacterial contamination of platelet products,
and that skin flora make up the vast majority of those contaminations. Fortunately, few of those
contaminants actually cause septic transfusion reactions (see the Blood Bank Guy Essentials Podcast,
episode 003, for further discussion on platelet septic reactions). Bacillus CAN certainly contaminate
platelets, but FAR less often than a coagulase-negative staphylococcus. HBV transmission is relatively rare,
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with a reported risk of roughly 1 in 1,000,000 transfusions. The last two possibilities are essentially “never”
events! FFP won’t transmit HTLV because HTLV lives in white blood cells, which are destroyed by the
freeze-thaw cycle that FFP undergoes. Malaria is a red cell parasite, and CRYO would not be expected to
transmit the parasite at all.
A 5th time blood donor has a repeat reactive anti-HCV EIA on a donation from August 5, 2015. His HCV
NAT is also positive. His previous donations are listed in the chart below:
Donation Number Donation Date Donation Type
5 8/05/2015 (current) Whole Blood
4 10/01/2011 Platelets
3 6/25/2011 Whole Blood
2 10/07/2010 Whole Blood
1 9/30/2008 Platelets
Which of the following statements is true regarding required lookback?
Recipients of blood products from donation 4 only must be notified
Recipients of blood products from donations 4 and 3 only must be notified
Recipients of blood products from donations 4, 3, and 2 only must be notified
Recipients of blood products from donations 4, 3, 2, and 1 must be notified
None of the blood product recipients from these previous donations must be notified
According to lookback regulations for HCV testing (see the FDA guidance document), for donors positive
on a current donation, lookback extends to ten years from the current donation or one year from the last
negatively-testing donation (whichever is shorter). In this case, the donor’s lookback period extends from
the date of his last negative donation (donation 4; 10/1/2011) to one year before that date (10/1/2010). As a
result, donations 4, 3, and 2 would be included, and recipients of those products should be notified and
tested for HCV.
Which of the following represents the correct order in which markers for HIV become detectable after
infection (from earliest to latest)?
HIV-1 NAT, anti-HIV 1,2, p24 antigen
anti-HIV-1,2, p24 antigen, HIV-1 NAT
p24 antigen, HIV-1 NAT, anti-HIV-1,2
HIV-1 NAT, p24 antigen, anti-HIV-1,2
anti-HIV-1,2, HIV-1 NAT, p24 antigen
Even though p24 antigen is no longer required for US blood collection facilities, the order that the markers
become positive is important for blood banking students to know. HIV-1 RNA generally becomes detectable
by NAT (whether by PCR or TMA) about 9-10 days after infection, making it the most valuable test to
decrease the window period and prevent transmission of early infections. p24 antigen is the next marker to
become positive, about 16 days after infection, while the EIA for anti-HIV-1,2 does not become positive
until 20-22 days after an acute HIV infection.
Which of the following represents the correct order in which markers for HBV become detectable after
infection (from earliest to latest)?
HBV NAT, anti-HBs, HBsAg
HBV NAT, HBsAg, anti-HBc
anti-HBc, HBV NAT, HBsAg
HBsAg, HBV NAT, anti-HBc
HBsAg, anti-HBc, HBV NAT
This and the previous question illustrate a pretty simple point that everyone should remember about blood
donor testing. In general, the order of positivity of markers is predictable. It goes like this: First NAT, then
antigen tests, then antibody tests. Testing for HBV illustrates this principle perfectly. Before we had HBV
NAT (“recommended” but functionally mandated in a 2012 FDA guidance), HBsAg was reliably the first
HBV serologic test to become detectable following HBV infection (this is partly due to the overproduction
of HBsAg by viral demand, with “spillover” of HBsAg from the hepatocytes into the circulation); this still
may take a couple of months, however (anti-HBc follows HBsAg by a few days, by the way). HBV NAT
has been reported to take up to 40 days off of the “window period” between infection and lab detection by
HBsAg!
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————————————————————————————————
Chemistry:
ALP GGT ALT AST LD
1. Liver disease Inc Inc Inc Inc Inc
2. the longest cardiac enzyme elevated ——- troponin 10 to 14 days
myoglobin – 1st enzyme to elevate for 24 hours
LD - elevated for 5 days
Question is presented in graph , choose the right graph.
3. OGTT-when is the pC considered diabetes know the normal value after 30 mins, 1 hr, 2 hr, 3 hr
6. Acid base balance: remember the NV and you can easily answer the question. IF Respiratory acidosis,
resp. alkalosis, metabolic acidosis, metabolic alkalosis
ph = 7.35 – 7.45
p CO2 = 35 – 45
HCO3 = 22-26
7.computation: How many ml of 95% alcohol are needed to prepare 100 ml of 70 % alcohol?
answer = 73.7 ml use the formula VI C1 = V2 C2
9.Breast CA tumor marker: For advanced CA : They may pick one from this marker, remember this.
CA 15-3
CA 27-27
Truquqnt R/A
For Primary Breast CA, Recurrent or metastatic:
Estrogen and progesterone receptors
HER -2 – Neu
12) Which one of the following would change if remove out the buffy coat in lipemia? sorry i don’t know
the answer.I guessed triglycerides.
15) Impaired Glucose Tolerance is defined as: read on GTT lecture (diabetes) the abnormal value
18) Hypothyroidism —- know the result of T4 dec , T3 dec, TSH inc.
3) Enrichment medium for isolation of Legionella ———– Buffered charcoal yeast extract agar
some of the choices Regan lowe, tindale agar , Loeffler medium ,read what is this for they might change the
question to this.
17) What is the meaning of beta and gamma zone merge? hemolysis, complete rupture of RBC
19) read what organism seen in CSF as to age of the patient . this is a case which you will identify the
organism .
Hematology:
1) auer rods seen in —————–AML (acute myelocytic leukemia) KNOW THE PIC
2. Identify the picture and know the disease ass wl it:
hypersegmented neutrophil
pappenheimer
Dohle bodie
promyelocyte
sickle cell
tear drop cells
pseudo pelger huet picture
Basophilic stippling picture and ass disease
Smudge cells ——- seen in what kind of leukemia (CLL)
3) HgB electrophoresis
4) ALL ( acute lymphocytic leukemia) ———-most common in children
5) Acute leukemia ——— many blast cells
6) ESR inc —– tilted tube
7) manual white blood cell count——– acetic acid is used as diluent
8) osmotic fragility—— inc in hereditary spherocytosis
9) PT-detects deficiencies in extrinxic and common pathways; use to monitor coumadin theraphy
10) Anti thrombin III ——- heparin co factor; deficiencies ass. wl thrombosis
11) Inc LAP -seen in polycythemia vera and leukemoid reaction -dec in CML
12) What is Bernard – Soulier Syndrome
13) What is Von Willebrand disease
AML - Sudan Black (+), CAE (+), peroxidase (+); Auer rods - Adult
ALL - PAS (+), Oil red O (+); Children
BLOOD Banking:
1) Know how to detect antibodies in BLOOD Panel: I got 1 question only
2) Formula how to give Rhogam
3) 1 vial of Rhogam = 30 IU of fetal blood ; 1 vial of Rhogam = 15 IU of whole blood
to covert ug to IU ————- ug x 5 = IU
Ex: 6 ug x 5 = 30 IU
4) Antigens destroyed wl the use of enzymes: M N Ss Duffy
Antigens enhanced RH Kidd Lewis P
5) phenotyping of Rh antigens
6) Know the cold antibodies and warm antibodies
7) Leukocyte reduced RBC’s ———— given in pt wl history of febrile reaction
8) Read changes in stored blood what happen?
9)Read blood donor requirement?
I) panel shown cells 1-10 were positive, but cell 3 & 6 were enhanced and agglutinated, what antibody is it:
a) fya *B) E C) MN, S etc
II) this panel was very confusing b/c from Coombs it was anti-C , but in AHG all cell were reacting (+),
except 1cell (-) in middle probably cell 6 or 7. But it didn’t ask which antibody it is , rather which cells
should be used.
> Cold agglutinationin syndrome ( I, P1 etc)
>how mucin clot in synovial fluid—– I chose acetic acid
> what does HÁČEK group include
Immunology:
1) Auto – antibodies :
anti smooth muscle ——– auto immune heaptitis
anti -ds DNA —————- SLE
anti -Mitochondrial ——– billiary cirrhosis
2) Interferons
3) Prozone
4) Ouchterlony Technique
5) nephelometry
6) Non treponemal test for SY
7) Indirect Flourescent Antibody ——– T. pallidum
8) Heterophile Antibodies —— test for infectious mononucleosis
9) Anti HBs ———- recovery and immunity
10) Wester blot ———— confirmatory test for HIV
11) Know serial dilution :: 1:2 @ 6th test tube
12) What is anamnestic?
13) Croprecipitate —— know expiry date , a case study to answer when to give when pooled.
14) what is hh?
15) what causes false + to HIV?
13)Principle of agglutination
a) floccullation
E. nana:
E. histolytica:
9. CPT blood was drawn @ 10 Am, pooled @ 11:30 am. Patient has xray @ 2 pm, what will you do with the
product?
- transfuse the blood before xray
10. Enzymes:
Destroy = M N S Duffy
Enhance = Rh Lewis I Kidd
- LE
- RF
- IM
- Infectious Hepatitis
- Leprosy
- Malaria
- Pregnancy
- Aging process
- Pneumococcal pneumonia
Feedback
This is an example of a mix of homogeneous and speckled ANA patterns.
In this sample notice the speckled ANA is the dominant pattern in the interphase cells (a) and some
speckling in the area outside of the chromosomal area of the mitotics (b).
Also notice the smooth staining of the chromosomal area of the metaphase mitotic cells (c). This represents
the presence of a homogeneous ANA pattern.
c. Speckled - a grainy pattern with numerous round dots of nuclear fluorescence, without staining of
the nucleoli
- i.e. anti – RNP
anti – Sm ……. Specific for SLE
- occurs in the presence of antibody to any extractable nuclear antigen devoid of DNA or histone
- the antibody is detected against the saline extractable nuclear antigens
- antiobodies to Sm antigens is highly specific for SLE and as a “ marker “ antibody.
d. Nucleolar - a few round, smooth nucleoli that vary in size will fluoresce when examined with UV.
- i.e. anti- nucleolar
- present in 50% with Scleroderma, Sjogren’s syndrome, SLE
Antibodies are proteins, produced by white blood cells, which normally circulate in the blood to
defend against foreign invaders such as bacteria, viruses, and toxins.
Autoantibodies, instead of acting against foreign invaders, attack the body's own cells. This is an
abnormality.
Antinuclear antibodies are a unique group of autoantibodies that have the ability to attack structures
in the nucleus of cells. The nucleus of a cell contains genetic material referred to as DNA
(deoxyribonucleic acid).
An ANA test (antinuclear antibody test) can be performed on a patient's blood sample as part of the
diagnostic process for certain autoimmune diseases.
To perform the ANA test, sometimes called FANA (fluorescent antinuclear antibody test), a blood sample is
drawn from the patient and sent to the lab for testing. Serum from the patient's blood specimen is added to
microscope slides which have commercially prepared cells on the slide surface. If the patient's serum
contains antinuclear antibodies, they bind to the cells (specifically the nuclei of the cells) on the slide.
A second antibody, commercially tagged with a fluorescent dye, is added to the mix of patient's serum and
commercially prepared cells on the slide. The second (fluorescent) antibody attaches to the serum antibodies
and cells which have bound together. When the slide is viewed under an ultraviolet microscope, antinuclear
antibodies appear as fluorescent cells.
ANA Titer
A titer is determined by repeating the positive test with serial dilutions until the test yields a negative result.
The last dilution which yields a positive result (fluorescence observed under the microscope) is the titer
which gets reported. Here is an example:
1:10 positive
1:20 positive
1:40 positive
1:80 positive
1:160 positive (reported titer)
1:320 negative
Positive or negative
If positive, a titer is determined and reported
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The pattern of fluorescence is reported
ANA titers and patterns can vary between laboratory testing sites, perhaps because of variation in
methodology used. These are the commonly recognized patterns:
Homogeneous - total nuclear fluorescence due to antibody directed against nucleoprotein. Common
in systemic lupus erthematosus (SLE).
Peripheral - fluorescence occurs at edges of nucleus in a shaggy appearance. Anti-DNA antibodies
cause this pattern. Also common in SLE.
Speckled - results from antibody directed against different nuclear antigens.
Nucleolar - results from antibody directed against a specific RNA configuration of the nucleolus or
antibody specific for proteins necessary for maturation of nucleolar RNA. Seen in patients with systemic
sclerosis (scleroderma).
Antinuclear antibodies are found in patients who have various autoimmune diseases, but not only in
autoimmune diseases. Antinuclear antibodies can be found also in patients with infections, cancer, lung
diseases, gastrointestinal diseases, hormonal diseases, blood diseases, skin diseases, and in elderly people or
people with a family history of rheumatic disease. Antinuclear antibodies are actually found in about 5% of
the normal population, too.
ANA test results are just one factor considered when a diagnosis is being formulated. A patient's clinical
symptoms and other diagnostic tests must also be considered by the doctor. Medical history is also
significant because some prescription drugs can cause "drug-induced antinuclear antibodies".
Statistically-speaking, the incidence of positive ANA test results (in percent per condition) is:
Subsets of the ANA tests are sometimes used to determine the specific autoimmune disease. For this
purpose, a doctor may order anti-dsDNA, anti-Sm, Sjogren's syndrome antigens(SSA, SSB), Scl-70
antibodies, anti-centromere, anti-histone, and anti-RN.
The ANA test is complex, but the results (positive or negative, titer, pattern) and possible subset test results
can give physicians valuable diagnostic information.
Consequences
A blood test determines the presence of antibodies to polynucleotides, histones and DNA. This process
involves running 27 different tests on a sample of blood.
The presence of antibodies is also tested for by doing the ANA test. This is a less sensitive test but one that
many doctors have already done on their patients before we ever see them.
The test is reported as a titer and a pattern. Any titer above 1:40 is significant. The titers can get into the
thousands such as 1:2,500. This simply means that the test is positive when the blood serum is diluted many
times.
Some women demonstrate a mixed pattern of speckled/homogeneous. These same antibodies appear
positive in women with lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease and other autoimmune diseases. They
are usually in high titers. Pregnancy losses, infertility and IVF failures cause the titers to be much lower and
a low positive titer does not mean that you have or are getting an autoimmune disease; however, this is ruled
out during the testing.
In women with autoimmune diseases these antibodies cause inflammation in joints and organs. In women
with no autoimmune diseases but a positive antibody, the antibody causes inflammation around the embryo
at the time of implantation or in the placenta after implantation. This inflammation is exactly the same as
- infectious mononucleosis
- test to detect:
a) Mono spot
b) CBC
c) EBV serology
- can help detect if an individual has an infection due to EBV, and if they are prone
to future infections due to dormant virus.
- VCA-IgM
VA-IgG Tests ---------- help to identify current infection
EA-D
EBNA Test -------------- help to dx future infection due to an existing dormant virus.
d) throat culture
e) Liver profile
I M V C:
E. coli + + - -
KES - - + +
Shigella + + + +
- Sensitization
= 1st step in agglutination
= physical attachments of antibody molecules to antigens on the RBC membranes
- Lattice Formation
= establishments of cross – links between sensitized particles and antibodies resulting in
aggregation (clumping), is a much slower process thant the sensitization phase
32. Green top tube , blood is collected and refrigerated for 3 hours. Should you not accept?
My answer: plasma should be separated before refrigeration
38. automaterd method for measuring Chloride which generates silver ions in the reaction.
- cystic fibrosis
- Coulometry
42. Which of the following methods is MOST reliable for determining the appropriate dosage of Rh immune
globulin to give to an identified Rh immune globulin candidate after delivery?
Flow cytometry is the most reliable method of those listed. It is a quantitative method, whereas Keihauer-
Betke and the rosette test are very subjective tests.
43. Hemoglobin electrophoresis uses an electric field to separate hemoglobin molecules based on
differences in net electrical charge. The rate of electrophoretic migration is also dependent on the ionic
radius of the molecule, the viscosity of the solution through which it is migrating, the electrical field
strength, temperature, and the type of supporting medium used.
- Drugs
48. Machines set @ 150 wavelenght, then wavelength @ 0 when used. What is the problem?
Hemochromatosis
Iron deficiency anemia
Anemia of chronic diseases
Thalassemia
Page 281 of 287
57. Monoclonal graph . What to do next?
- multiple myeloma
- presence of Bence jones protein in the urine
- monoclonal gammopathy
Bone marrow cytology in a dog with multiple myeloma. There are large numbers of plasma cells (*) in the
aspirate, some of which are binucleate. Hematopoietic cells (both myeloid [M] and erythroid [E]) are found
in normal numbers and maturation sequence.
I. Labs: Findings
Serum:
-Immunoelectrophoresis
-Immunofixation
-Quantitation of immunoglobulins by radial immunodiffusion or nephelometry
- Screening for croglobulins
- Determination of serum viscosity of IgM, IgA, or IgG , or signs and symptoms suggestive of
Hyperviscosity
Urine:
- Screening of urine for increased protein, e.g. sulfosalicylic acid
- Total protein assay of a 24 hour urine specimen
- Urinary protein electrophorsis
- Urinary immunoelectrophoresis
- Immunofixation
63. Hematology:
Target Cells
DIC
CLL
Smudge cells
Big Platelet
66. Ferritin :
1. Blood gas was exposed to air for 1 hour and the Ph rised, b/c
a) CO2 was lost
b) HCO3 was retained
c) PCo2 was retained
3. Rh- mother has increase titer of anti-D. After delivery, the DAT is strongly (+) but the baby is Rh-
a) inadequate washing
b) added monoclonal anti-D sera instead of anti globulin (or vise versa)
c) or maternal antibodies blocking the antigenic site
9) a 3 yrs old baby swallowed organophosphate pesticide. What's the best analysis
a) serum protein
b) serum glucose
c) urine arsenic
d) urine mercury
10) Cryoprecipitate was thawed @11:00am and stored in 20-24oC until requested @ 1:00pm
a) don't wait transfuse immediatly
b) discard b/c it's storage temp 1-6o C
c) transfuse within 6 hours of pooling
13)Principle of agglutination
a) floccullation
b) precipitation
3-4 panels :
I) panel shown cells 1-10 were positive, but cell 3 & 6 were enhanced and agglutinated, what antibody is it
a) fya
*B) E
C) MN, S etc
II) this panel was very confusing b/c from Coombs it was anti-C , but in AHG all cell were reacting (+),
except 1cell (-) in middle probably cell 6 or 7. But it didn't ask which antibody it is , rather which cells
should be used.
> Cold agglutinationin syndrome ( I, P1 etc)
>how mucin clot in synovial fluid----- I chose acetic acid
> what does HÁČEK group include