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Chemical Assay of Serum, Plasma, or Whole Blood Clinical Pathology Chemical Assay • Most vet clinics use equipment to perform routine chemical assays in-house. • Important aid in accurate diagnosis, treatment, and response to medications. • Measure levels of dissolved substances normally in blood. Sample Collection • Whole Blood: Made up of fluid and cells. (sample is mixed with anticoagulant and can not be frozen) • Fluid=plasma • Cells= RBC’s, WBC’s, Platelets • Plasma: 90% water and 10% dissolved components such as proteins, carbohydrates, vitamins, hormones, enzymes, lipids, electrolytes, wastes, etc. • Can be refrigerated or frozen • Collected by centrifuging unclotted blood. Sample Collection Continued • Serum: blood is allowed to clot then centrifuged. Serum is plasma from which fibrinogen has been removed. • Sometimes may freeze sample • Red top or clot activator tubes Anticoagulants • Heparin: interferes the least with chemical assays. • Available in different salt forms. • Should be used at least 20 units/ml of blood • Green top tube • EDTA: Choice for hematologic studies because it does not alter cell morphology. • Should be used at 1-2 mg/ml blood collected. • Lavender top tube Anticoagulants Continued • Oxalates: sodium, potassium, ammonium, or lithium salts. • Potassium is the most common form used. • May interfere with enzymatic activity • Sodium Fluoride: glucose preservative • Sodium citrate: coagulation test. Factors Affecting Results • Hemolysis: syringe collection, forcing blood through the needle. • Chemical contamination: tubes must be chemically pure. • Improper labeling • Improper handling: use sample within one hour. • Patient influences: e.g. fasting animal may decrease glucose, lipemia post meal ingestion. Enzymology • Enzymes are proteins produced in cells. • Catalysts for chemical reactions. • Most enzymes are formed and function intracellularly. • Blood levels should be low in a healthy animal. • The blood level can increase if the enzyme has leaked out of damaged cells. • Substrates are substances enzymes help to form into specific products. • Assays performed determine the enzyme concentration by measuring the enzymatic reaction. • An uncatalyzed reaction requires a higher activation energy than does a catalyzed reaction. • There is no difference in free energy between catalyzed and uncatalyzed reactions. Endpoint Assays • Product formed from enzymatic action interacts with a reagent to produce a color complex. • The amount of light absorbed by the color complex present indirectly reflects the amount of enzyme present in the sample. Factors Influencing Enzyme Activity • Inhibited: Low temperatures, dehydration, UV light, and heavy metals. • Accelerated: High temperatures • Can be denatured by temperature and pH extremes. • A small change in the polypeptide chain can cause the enzyme to lose activity. • Each enzyme has an optimum temperature in which it works effectively. Components of Enzymes • Substrate: substance acted on by the enzyme. • Buffer: keeps the pH of the system constant to ensure maximal enzyme activity. • Cofactor/coenzyme: Acclerate a reaction. Temperature • If refrigerated serum is used, it must be prewarmed before added to the test system. • If serum needs to prewarmed, then the test needs to be prewarmed also. • Anticoagulants may nterfere with the activity of enzymes. Terms • Named for the substrate they act on or the biochemical reaction which they participate. • Most enzymes end in –ase. • Isoenzymes: group of enzymes with similar catalytic activities but different physical properties. • Ex. Serum alkaline phosphatase is found in many tissues such as osteoblasts and hepatocytes. Hyperlipidemia • Increased concentration of lipids, specifically cholesterol an triglycerides. • Can find gross lipemia in the plasma sample. • May be postprandial or indicate disease. • Pancreatitis. • Hyperhthyroidism • Diabetes mellitus Amylase • Digestive enzyme stored in pancreas. • Leakage of amylase may be measured in blood during inflammation (pancreatitis). • Levels may also be high due to renal dysfunction. • Why does amylase not go up in cats? Lipase • Secreted by the pancreas in active form. • Should be measured with amylase. • Kidneys play a role in the degradation of lipase. • Found in animals with a high fat diet. Trypsin-like Immunoreactivity (TLI) • Test for exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (TLI). • Useful in cases of malabsorption. • Common in German Shepards over 8 months of age. • When animals do not secrete amylase and lipase properly. Glucose • • • Formed by digestion of carbohydrates and the conversion of glycogen by the liver. Primary source of energy for most cells. Sources of blood glucose: • Dietary • Increases2-4 hours postprandial except in ruminants • Malabsorption and starving may cause hypoglycemia. • Glycogenolysis • Primary source of glucose while fasting • May be caused by catecholamine release (>300 mg/dl in the cat). • Hyperglycemial in cattle with neurologic signs • Corticosteroids • Growth Hormone • Certain drugs Fate of Glucose • Insulin stimulates cellular uptake (muscle, fat, liver). • Blood glucose levels \>30 mg/dl stimulates insulin release. Hypoglycemia • • • • • • Insulin hypersecretion Insulin overdose Sepsis Extreme leukocytosis Pregnancy Prolonged Starvation Hyperglycemia • Increased peripheral resistance to insulin • Diabetes mellitus and decreased insulin production • Stress (cat) • Postprandial • Pancreatitis