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testing cord bloods


Rita

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We have always washed our cord blood specimens six times prior to testing.  I believe it is to prevent contaimination with Wharton's jelly, etc.   I can't really find any references about this practice, so am curious -  do other people out there wash cord blood specimens prior to testing?

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14 hours ago, Rita said:

We have always washed our cord blood specimens six times prior to testing.  I believe it is to prevent contaimination with Wharton's jelly, etc.   I can't really find any references about this practice, so am curious -  do other people out there wash cord blood specimens prior to testing?

With respect to the Acid Elution; according to procedure instructions in the package insert the cells are washed once with saline and four time with working wash solution but saline can be substituted for the working wash solution if none specific bonding is suspected; this would be a total of five washes in saline. Long ago when we had a very large blood bank lesure for documenting all testing and transactions, the blood bank supervisor explained that washing the cells excessively; six times or more could cause a loss of the antigen and therefore it would not be detected. We currently wash cord cells a maximum of four times prior to testing to remove Worten's Jelly and other unbound stuff.

Edited by rravkin@aol.com
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We get enough cord blood specimens that are nasty that all tube testing is done after the cells are washed 6 times. When I tilt the collection tube and the specimen runs down the inner wall in a stringy looking stream, I know that those washes are going to be essential. I question the method used to collect the specimens, but have no control over it. Based on the appearance of the specimen tubes, I suspect that sometimes they hold the cord over the open tube, open the clamp and let it run in until (over)full. :omg: I'm planning to automate cord blood testing in the next few months, so the condition of the exterior of the tube will then become an issue - let the battle begin!

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Discontinued routine washing of cord blood cells for standard tube testing decades ago.  Routine washing assumes all cord blood samples are contaminated to the extent that false-positive results would be obtained without washing. In the absence of supporting data,  it is a "solution looking for a problem".

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