Bm examination

17,771 views 28 slides Aug 25, 2015
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About This Presentation

Bone Marrow Examination


Slide Content

Dr. Aye Aye Tun
Pathology Unit, Faculty of Medicine
RCMP, UniKl

Purpose
1. To confirm the diagnosis
2. To assess the response to the
treatment
3. To obtain the specimen for
microbiological examination
4. To obtain the specimen for research
5. To obtain the aspiration of bone
marrow for transplantation

Types
1. Bone marrow aspiration
2. Bone marrow trephine biopsy

Bone marrow aspiration
1. Leishman's stain
2. Special stain for iron stores
Iron stain (Perl's Prussian blue reaction)
presence of ironbluish green area
3. Cytochemical stain
4. Immunocytochemical stain

Prussian blue stains of bone marrow aspirates in
normal (left) and iron-deficiency states (right)

Bone marrow trephine biopsy
1. Haematoxylin and Eosin stain
- histological examination
2. Histochemical stain
3. Immunohistochemical stain

Advantages of BM aspiration
1. Simple
2. Safe
3. Relatively painless
4. Can be repeated many times
5. Can be performed at OPD
6. Morphology of haemopoietic cells
can be simply identified.

Disadvantages
1. The arrangement of the cells in the
marrow and the relationships between
one cell and another are more or less
destroyed by the process of aspiration
2. Fibrotic marrow and highly cellular
marrow ® Dry tap

Advantages of Trephine biopsy
1. Can provide a perfect view of the
structure of relatively large pieces of
marrow
2. Superior to BM aspiration in some
circumstances e.g. for diagnosing
marrow involvement by malignant
lymphomas or non-haematological
neoplastic diseases

Both BM aspiration and Trephine biopsy
have an important and complementary role.

Sites
1. Sternum
2. Iliac spines (PSIS)
3. Spinous process (Lumbar vertebrae)
4. Heel (Children)

BM Aspiration Needle
•1. Salah and Klima needle
•2. Islam needle

Salah and Klima needleSalah and Klima needle

Islam's bone-marrow Islam's bone-marrow
aspiration/trephine needleaspiration/trephine needle

Bone marrow films
1. Direct smear preparation
2. Concentration of BM by centrifugation
(Poorly cellular samples)

Examination of BM film
1. BM fragments and cellularity
2. Erythropoiesis
3. Leucopoiesis
4. Megakaryopoiesis
5. M:E Normal 3-4:1 (15:1)
6. Presence of foreign cells
7. BM iron stain (Perl’s Prussian blue)

normal bone marrow at medium magnification

normal bone marrow at medium magnification

normal bone marrow at medium magnification

Bone Marrow Biopsy
Markedly hypocellular marrow which is largely devoid of
hematopoietic cells and contains mainly fat cells, fibrous
stroma, scattered lymphocytes and plasma cells

A - a markedly hypocellular bone marrow (<5%cellularity)
B - approximately 40% cellularity
C - bonemarrow with nearly 100% cellularity

normal bone marrow smear
erythroid precursors
granulocytic precursors

Marrow smear from a patient with hemolytic anemia
ERYTHROID HYPERPLASIA
The marrow reveals greatly increased numbers of maturing
erythroid progenitors (normoblasts)

Marrow smear from a patient with anemia
Megaloblasts in various stages of differentiation.
granulocytic precursors
Orthochromatic megaloblast
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