Relationship between Canine Lymphocyte AgNOR Counts and Haematological Indices of Health

A modified agyrophil technique was applied to peripheral blood smears to determine the mean AgNOR counts (MAC) of lymphocytes and ultimately assess the state of the lymphoid system in various clinical conditions of dogs. Fifty dogs, from clinically normal to pets with leukaemia, presented to the Vet...

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Main Authors: Antia R. E., Ogunsola J.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2018-09-01
Series:Folia Veterinaria
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/fv-2018-0023
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spelling doaj-09915659a99f4f06a5c88469d42a94732021-09-05T21:01:06ZengSciendoFolia Veterinaria2453-78372018-09-01623242810.2478/fv-2018-0023fv-2018-0023Relationship between Canine Lymphocyte AgNOR Counts and Haematological Indices of HealthAntia R. E.0Ogunsola J.1Department of Veterinary PathologyVeterinary Teaching Hospital, University of Ibadan, IbadanNigeriaA modified agyrophil technique was applied to peripheral blood smears to determine the mean AgNOR counts (MAC) of lymphocytes and ultimately assess the state of the lymphoid system in various clinical conditions of dogs. Fifty dogs, from clinically normal to pets with leukaemia, presented to the Veterinary Teaching Hospital, were recruited. Blood smears from each dog were stained with routine Romanowsky and modified agyrophil stains. Signalment, clinical diagnoses and hematologic parameters of the dogs were related to the MAC. An AgNOR proliferative index (AgPI) — percentage of lymphocytes with 3 or more AgNORs, was determined, and correlated with MAC. The statistical significance was determined at P < 0.05. MAC ranged from 1.17 in clinically healthy patients to 6.00 in leukaemic patients. The MAC was 2.00 in patients (n = 26) with lymphocyte counts within reference intervals (900—2400 per microliter); 2.23 in patients (n = 4) with lymphopenia; 2.18 in patients with lymphocytosis (n = 18) and 4.73 in patients (n = 4) with lymphocytic leukemia. Also, the MAC was 2.00 in non-anemic dogs while it was 2.47, 2.49 and 3.06 in patients with mild, moderate and severe anaemia, respectively. The MAC correlated strongly with AgPI (r = 0.91). The ancillary AgNOR technique provides a cheaper, more rapid and sensitive tool than routine lymphocyte counts in assessing the state of lymphoid proliferation in a variety of conditions in the dog.https://doi.org/10.2478/fv-2018-0023agnorcaninehaematologylymphocyte
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Antia R. E.
Ogunsola J.
spellingShingle Antia R. E.
Ogunsola J.
Relationship between Canine Lymphocyte AgNOR Counts and Haematological Indices of Health
Folia Veterinaria
agnor
canine
haematology
lymphocyte
author_facet Antia R. E.
Ogunsola J.
author_sort Antia R. E.
title Relationship between Canine Lymphocyte AgNOR Counts and Haematological Indices of Health
title_short Relationship between Canine Lymphocyte AgNOR Counts and Haematological Indices of Health
title_full Relationship between Canine Lymphocyte AgNOR Counts and Haematological Indices of Health
title_fullStr Relationship between Canine Lymphocyte AgNOR Counts and Haematological Indices of Health
title_full_unstemmed Relationship between Canine Lymphocyte AgNOR Counts and Haematological Indices of Health
title_sort relationship between canine lymphocyte agnor counts and haematological indices of health
publisher Sciendo
series Folia Veterinaria
issn 2453-7837
publishDate 2018-09-01
description A modified agyrophil technique was applied to peripheral blood smears to determine the mean AgNOR counts (MAC) of lymphocytes and ultimately assess the state of the lymphoid system in various clinical conditions of dogs. Fifty dogs, from clinically normal to pets with leukaemia, presented to the Veterinary Teaching Hospital, were recruited. Blood smears from each dog were stained with routine Romanowsky and modified agyrophil stains. Signalment, clinical diagnoses and hematologic parameters of the dogs were related to the MAC. An AgNOR proliferative index (AgPI) — percentage of lymphocytes with 3 or more AgNORs, was determined, and correlated with MAC. The statistical significance was determined at P < 0.05. MAC ranged from 1.17 in clinically healthy patients to 6.00 in leukaemic patients. The MAC was 2.00 in patients (n = 26) with lymphocyte counts within reference intervals (900—2400 per microliter); 2.23 in patients (n = 4) with lymphopenia; 2.18 in patients with lymphocytosis (n = 18) and 4.73 in patients (n = 4) with lymphocytic leukemia. Also, the MAC was 2.00 in non-anemic dogs while it was 2.47, 2.49 and 3.06 in patients with mild, moderate and severe anaemia, respectively. The MAC correlated strongly with AgPI (r = 0.91). The ancillary AgNOR technique provides a cheaper, more rapid and sensitive tool than routine lymphocyte counts in assessing the state of lymphoid proliferation in a variety of conditions in the dog.
topic agnor
canine
haematology
lymphocyte
url https://doi.org/10.2478/fv-2018-0023
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