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Chapter 2.ppt
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Chapter 2.ppt

  1. 1. Serologic techniques
  2. 2. Learning Objective The students should be able to: 1. List material and equipment for serological tests 2. Collect, preserve and prepare serological specimens 3. Run complement inactivation procedure and state its importance 4. Run serial dilution, determine end point and titer.
  3. 3. Outline 1. Introduction 2. Materials necessary for basic serologic tests 3. Collection, preparation and preservation of serologic al tests 4. Shipment of serological specimens 5. Complement inactivation 6. Dilution and Serial dilution
  4. 4. 1. Introduction  Dilution is the act of making a weaker solution from a strong solution.  Serial dilution The systematic re-dilution of a fluid number of times is called a Serial dilution  Titer is the reciprocal of the highest dilution showing a positive reaction  Complement is a group of non-immunoglobulin plasma proteins that are sequentially activated by Ag–Ab complexes
  5. 5. Types of glassware include:  Test tubes  Glass slides  Serological pipette with a size of 10ml, 5ml, 2ml and 1ml. 2. Materials necessary for basic serologic tests
  6. 6. 2. Materials necessary for basic serologic tests Glassware  Dirty glassware easily affects serological tests.  After using all the glassware (test tube, beaker, pipette, etc) they should be soaked in detergent for several hours and rinsed several times in tap water.  Finally, allow drying by placing in a dry oven or dust free place. Test tubes and pipettes should not be scratched or broken, which will interfere with the reading of a test.
  7. 7. Glassware's and plastic wares
  8. 8. Constant Temperature Device  Incubators and water baths are used in serological tests. These materials are electrically operated and have thermostat that hold the temperature within the required limits. These devices should be checked prior to use by a thermometer. 2. Materials necessary for basic serologic tests
  9. 9. Rotating Machine  Rotating machines are required to facilitate antigen antibody reactions. Such machines have a flat plate, which rotate at a prescribed rate of speed. A knob located on the front of the machine controls the number of revolutions per minute. 2. Materials necessary for basic serologic tests
  10. 10. 3. Collection, Preparation And Preservation Of Specimens For Serologic tests A.Types of Specimens  Specimens that are used for serologic test include: serum, plasma and cerebrospinal fluid.  Serum or plasma samples could be obtained from venous blood, which can be collected by the laboratory personnel.  CSF should be collected by a physician or
  11. 11. B. Serum or plasma sample collection  Collect 2-3ml of venous blood from a patient using a sterile syringe and needle.  If serum is required, allow the whole blood to clot at room temperature for at least one hour,  Centrifuge the clotted blood for 10 minutes at 2000 rpm. 3. Collection, Preparation And Preservation Of Specimens For Serologic tests
  12. 12. B. Serum or plasma sample collection  Transfer the serum to a labeled tube with a paster pipette and rubber bulb.  Plasma samples are obtained by treating fresh blood with anticoagulant,  Centrifuge and separate the supernatant. 3. Collection, Preparation And Preservation Of Specimens For Serologic tests
  13. 13. B. Serum or plasma sample collection  The specimen should be free from hemolyzed blood.  Finally, seal the specimen containing tube; the tube should be labeled with full patient's identification (age, sex, code number, etc).  The test should be performed within hours after sample collection, if this could not be done preserve it at -20oc. 2. Collection, Preparation And Preservation Of Specimens For Serologic tests
  14. 14.  Most health center and clinic laboratories are limited in the diagnostic procedures that can be carried out and have to ship serologic specimens to other laboratories.  Before shipment, the following things should be considered.  Don't ship whole blood unless the tests to be performed require whole blood.  Don't inactivate serum or plasma. 4. Shipment of serological specimens
  15. 15. Serum, plasma, and CSF should be handled as follows:  Collect and process specimens under sterile conditions.  Ship specimens by the fastest route as soon after collection as possible.  Don't ship whole blood unless the test to be performed required whole blood.  Remove cells from plasma and clot from serum before shipment. 4. Shipment of serological specimens
  16. 16. Serum, plasma, and CSF should be handled as follows:  Don't inactivate serum or plasma before mailing.  Keep the specimen and packing container in the refrigerator until time of shipment.  Shipment is requires several days preserve by refrigeration in transit. First, freeze the specimen; then pack and ship in a well-insulated container with dry ice. 4. Shipment of serological specimens
  17. 17.  Complement is a group of non-immunoglobulin plasma proteins that are sequentially activated by Ag–Ab complexes (or directly by microbial constituents) and cause irreversible damage to membrane of cellular target 5. Complement inactivation
  18. 18.  Some tests need inactivated serum. Others do not.  Inactivation may be important since complement promotes lysis of erythrocytes and can contribute to false test results in tests using RBCs.  Some complement components may also cause false agglutination in some tests. 5. Complement inactivation
  19. 19.  Complement components can be inactivated by of three mechanism  Spontaneous decay  Enzymatic degradation of C4, C3 and C5 rapidly decay  Stoichiometric inhibition 5. Complement inactivation
  20. 20.  The complement in serum must be inactivated usually by stoichiometric inhibition for most serological testing.  To inactivate complement, place tubes of serum in hot water bath (56c) for 30min  If the protein complement is not inactivated it will promote lysis of the red cells and other types of cells and can therefore produce invalid results 5. Complement inactivation
  21. 21.  Complement is also known to interfere with certain tests for syphilis.  Serum samples to be tested more than 4 hours after inactivation should be reheated at 560c for 10 minutes and allowed to cool to room temperature 5. Complement inactivation
  22. 22.  Dilution is the act of making a weaker solution from a strong solution.  Adding a diluent such as water or saline, which contains none of the material being diluted, is used to do this. 6. Dilution
  23. 23. Dilution techniques  Dilutions can be used in the laboratory to change the concentration of the body fluids, such as serum so that it is consistent with the range of an assay.  Making dilutions can also be necessary to prepare reagents and standards.  Dilution has two parts: diluents and solute. 6. Dilution
  24. 24.  A dilution involves adding of a substance, the diluent to other substances, the solute.  Dilutions show the relative amount of the solute in the dilute solution.  It is an indicator of concentration, not volume. 6. Dilution
  25. 25.  For a 1:10 dilution, the dilution factor is 10. For a : b dilution the dilution factor is b. 6. Dilution
  26. 26. Technique  Two liquids of very different compositions (density, or surface tension) is required  An exact volume of concentrated solute is added to a calibrated flask or container, and then diluent is added to the required volume.  Adequate mixing must take place to ensure homogeneity 6. Dilution
  27. 27. E.g., if you want to prepare 1:10 dilution  Take 1 ml solute  Take 9 ml solvent  Then mix 1st 2nd 6. Dilution
  28. 28.  When a solution is diluted with water, its concentration is decreased and its volume is increased. But the total amount of solute remains constant.  Mathematical expressions of the dilutions are; CiVi = CfVf Where, Ci is initial concentration Vi is initial volume. Cf final concentration Vf is final volume. 6. Dilution
  29. 29. Serial dilutions  Serial dilutions are a unique type of dilution techniques.  In serial dilution, all dilutions, except the 1st are prepared from the previous dilution and all dilutions made after the initial dilution are the same. 6. Dilution
  30. 30.  Serial dilutions are used to prepare sets of standard solutions and are also used to prepare patient's samples to analyze components that can exist over a wide concentration range, such as antibody titers. 6. Dilution
  31. 31. 0.1 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 initial Tube 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Dilution 1:10 1:20 1:40 1:80 1:160 1:320 1:640 1:1280 1:2560 1:5120 Dilution factor 10 20 40 80 160 320 640 1280 2560 5120 0.5 0.9 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 6. Dilution
  32. 32. An example of the serial dilution is as follows: -  Into each of ten test tubes is measured 0.5 ml of saline 1/2 ml of serum is placed in the 1st tube and mixed.  Since there is 0.5 ml of serum in a total volume of 1.0 ml; a 0.5:1 or a 1:2 dilution exists in the first tube. 6. Dilution
  33. 33.  Now, 0.5 ml of this solution is removed and mixed with the 0.5 ml of saline in the 2nd tube; this gives another 1:2 dilution, but since the 0.5 ml of solution put into the 2nd tube is already a 1:2 dilution of the serum, the dilution of serum in the 2nd tube is one half that of the 1st tube or 1/2 of ½ =1/4 or 1:4.  This and, by applying the above reasoning, the dilutions of serum are found to be (1/2)10 = 1/1024 or 1: 1024 in the 10th tube. 6. Dilution
  34. 34. Try the following problems  For ASO titer, tube 1 contains 0.8ml 0f saline, tubes 2 to 5 contain 0.5ml of saline; 0.2ml of serum is added to tube 1, and serial dilutions using 0.5ml are carried out in the remaining tubes. What is the dilution in each tube?  Explain the shipment of specimen and complement inactivation. Review questions
  35. 35. Reference 1. Tizard. Immunology an introduction,4th edition ,Saunders publishing,1994 2. Naville J. Bryant Laboratory Immunology and Serology 3rd edition. Serological services Ltd.Toronto,Ontario,Canada,1992 3. Mary Louise .Immunology and Serology in Laboratory medicine 3rd edition

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  • This is serial dilution technique

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