Impacts and Significance of white blood cell counts in lymphocytic and Neutrophilic species

Introduction

introduction added later


Blood Cells

Blood cells are cell that are mainly found in blood, and produced via hematopoiesis. While the liquid component of blood, plasma, make up 55% of the blood, blood cells make up 45% , and can be categorized into 3 different groups (1). Erythrocytes, Thrombocytes, and Leukocytes. Leukocytes are white blood cells that are in charge for immunological response, and can be differentiated to granulocytes and agranulocytes. *

Neutrophil Granulocytes

Manganese-https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manganese#/media/File:Mangan_1-crop.jpg
Fig. 1 Neutrophils
Segmented Neutrophil Granulocytes

Normal neutrophil morphology is similar in common domestic mammalian species. The chromatin of the nucleus is condensed and segmented and stains blue to purple. Nuclear lobes may be joined, but generally there is simply a narrowing of the nucleus between lobes without true filament formation (3).

Band neutrophils, which are the most common type of immature neutrophil seen in blood, is one stage less mature compared to segmented neutrophils. They can be distinguished from matures by the shape of their nucleus, lacking the clear segmentation (5).

Heterophils are are the most common leukocyte in avian blood and are analogous with mammalian neutrophils, however their nuclei aren't as lobulated (8).

Lymphocytes

Manganese-https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manganese#/media/File:Mangan_1-crop.jpg
Fig. 2 Lymphocytes
Raw form of element

Lymphocyte morphology can be characterized by its pale blue color of the cytoplasm and their nuclei are usually round or oval, allowing some slight indentation. Most of the lymphocytes that circulate in healthy dogs, cats, camelids and horses are small cells that have round nuclei with dense chromatin and a small rim of light blue cytoplasm. The chromatin is so dense because it is mostly heterochromatin (the cell is not actively transcribing DNA) (3).


WBC Counts

White Blood Cell count (WBC count) is an important subset of the complete blood count (CBC), as the number of leukocytes in the blood is often an indicator of disease (4). The WBC count is the total number of leukocytes in a given volume of blood. This count can be performed either manually or by automated cell counters.

The differential white blood cell count measures the percentage of each leukocyte subtype in an individual’s blood. It is performed by counting and identifying 200 consecutive leukocytes in a single drop of blood.

The absolute count for each leukocyte subtype can then be calculated by multiplying the differential by the total white blood cell count (6).

Total white blood cell counts in adult domestic animals (× 10*9 /l)

Species

Lymphocytes

Neutrophil

Eosinophil

Basophil

Monocyte

horse

1.5-7.0

2-8

0-1

0-2.9

0-1.5

cattle

2.5-7.5

0.6-4.0

0-2.4

0-0.2

0-0.8

sheep

2-9

0.7-6.0

0-1

0-0.3

0-0.8

goat

2-9

1.2-7.2

0-0.7

0-0.2

0-0.6

swine

4-24

3-20

0.5-2.4

0-0.4

0.2-22

dog

3-11

3-11

0.1-0.3

0-0.2

0.2-1.5

cat

1.5-7.0

3-12

0-1.5

0-0.2

0-1.5

rabbit

6

3 (heterophil)

0.1

0.3

0.3

Domestic fowl

7-17.5

3-6 (heterophil)

0-1

0-0.1

0.1-2

According to the ratio of lymphocytes and neutrophil granulocytes in blood circulation, species can be categorized into two groups: Lymphocytic and neutrophilic species, where lymphocytic species yield higher amount of lymphocytes compared to neutrophil granulocytes and vice versa for neutrophilic species. Species such as cattle, swine, sheep, and domestic fowl are considered to be lymphocytic species, where neutrophilic species are horse, dog, and cat.


Impacts and Significance of WBC Counts

Changes in white blood cell counts can indicate many alternations occurring within the body. The changes can be either physiological or pathological, and many reasons differ by the percentage of lymphocytes and neutrophils each species yield. Physiological causes are causes such as age, body mass, time or season, and stress. Meanwhile infections from virus, parasites, and bacteria are considered as a pathological cause, along with effect of toxins.

Physiological Causes

Age

Time, Season

Stress

Pregnancy

Pathological Causes

Bacteria infection

Virus infection

Parasites

Toxins

Other

Relevance to Veterinary Medicine

Methods: When measuring the number of leukocytes present, it should be estimated to assure that number present on the slide is consistent with the total leukocyte count measured. The total leukocyte count in blood may be estimated by determining the average number of leukocytes present per field and multiplying by 100 to 150 in case of 100X magnification. If a 20X objective is used, the total leukocyte count may be estimated by multiplying the average number of leukocytes per field by 400 to 600. The correction factor used may vary, depending on the microscope used. Since neutrophils tend to be pulled to the edges in glass slide, lymphocytes tend to remain in the body of the smear, differential counts are done by examining cells in a pattern that evaluates both the edges and the center of the smear. After the count is complete, the percentage of each leukocyte type present is calculated and multiplied by the total leukocyte count to get the absolute number of each cell type present per microliter of blood. Absolute number of each leukocyte type is considered more important since relative values (percentages) can be mislead to wrong results when the total leukocyte count is abnormal (3).

Mammalian species have nucleated leukocytes and thus when counting we generally use methods that count nuclei so it is known as a “nucleated cell count”. However when dealing with birds, reptiles and fish we must use different methods of counting as their erythrocyte and thrombocytes are also nucleated (13) (14).

References