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The effect of taurine addition on the complete blood count

SCIENTIFIC COMMENTS

The effect of taurine addition on the complete blood count

Maged Mohammed Yassin

Faculty of Medicine, The Islamic University of Gaza, Gaza Strip, Palestine

Corresponding author Corresponding author: Prof. Maged M. Yassin Faculty of Medicine, The Islamic University of Gaza P. O. Box 108, Gaza Strip, Palestine myassin@iugaza.edu.ps

The complete blood count (CBC), also known as hemogram or blood panel, one of the components of the routine physical examination, aims to provide a lot of information to the physician regarding the state of a person's general health. The CBC is frequently used as an essential screening test for a wide range of conditions and disorders, including anemia, infection and leukemia. The CBC test, which is reliably performed by automated machines in most laboratories, measures the quantity of all the cellular part of the blood: red blood cells (RBC), white blood cells (WBC) and platelets (PLT). Additionally, the CBC affords some valuable informationon other indices related to each type of blood cell. Any abnormities (increases or decreases) inblood cell counts or related indices as revealed by the CBC may indicate an underlying medical condition that directs and justifies further, more specific, laboratory investigations to confirm the diagnosis(1,2). For trustworthy results, the CBC test should be performed within a certain time limit which may be affected by the type of anticoagulant used and the preservation temperature and, to some extent, the automatic cell counter used(3,4). However, in different circumstances, processing blood samples is not possible within these time limits; hence blood samples received at the laboratories are either discarded or proceeded with doubtful reliability.

In the current issue of the Revista Brasileira de Hematologia e Hemoterapia, Sirdah et al. provide a new prospect to extending the time limit for trustworthy CBC test results(5). In their study the authors added the naturally-occurring ß-sulfonated amino acid, taurine, to K3-EDTA blood and tracked the changes on a daily basis for seven successive days at two different temperatures: ambient and refrigerated. The selection of taurine as an additive to the K3-EDTA blood is felicitous due to the striking beneficial effects of taurine on biological systems and cells which include antioxidation, inhibition of lipid peroxidation, stabilization of biomembranes, and maintenance of intracellular ions homeostasis(6). The significance of the study of Sirdah et al. is not limited to the promising results achieved; it could also encourage future studies to investigate the trustworthiness of the CBC over time using other chemical compounds. However, in future works, the blood film should be evaluated which may reveal the positively or negatively effects of taurine on RBC poikilocytosis. As taurine may exert beneficial effects on biomembrane stabilization, it is worthwhile to investigate the effect of taurine on RBC rheological properties.

Finally, the study of Sirdah et al. demonstrates the feasibility of adding an antioxidant to whole blood collected in K3-EDTA tubes which exhibited different patterns of reliability on CBC parameters over time. Moreover, it creates an opportunity to conduct further comprehensive comparative studies to evaluate other antioxidants and chemical compounds on the stability and reliability of laboratory tests that depend on the cellular components of the whole blood over time.

Submitted: 4/15/2012

Accepted: 9/3/2012

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The author declares no competing financial interest

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  • 1. Walters MC, Abelson HT. Interpretation of the complete blood count. Pediatr Clin North Am. 1996;43(3):599-622.
  • 2. George-Gay B, Parker K. Understanding the complete blood count with differential. J Perianesth Nurs. 2003;18(2):96-114; quiz 115-7.
  • 3. Recommendations of the International Council for Standardization in Haematology for ethylenediaminetetraaceticacid anticoagulation of blood for blood cell counting and sizing. International Council for Standardization in Haematology: Expert Panel on Cytometry. Am J Clin Pathol. 1993;100(4):371-2.
  • 4. Hedberg P, Lehto T. Aging stability of complete blood count and white blood cell differential parameters analyzed by Abbott CELL-DYN Sapphire hematology analyzer. Int J Lab Hematol. 2009;31(1):87-96. Erratum In: Int J Lab Hematol. 2009;31(1):118.
  • 5. Sirdah MM, Abushahla AN, Al Sarraj H, Effect of antioxidant "taurine" addition on reliability of complete blood count and indices of whole blood stored at room temperature and at 4şC refrigerator up to 7 days. Rev Bras Hematol Hemoter. 2013;35(1):44-51.
  • 6. Huxtable RJ. Physiological actions of taurine. Physiol Rev. 1992;72(1):101-63.
  • Corresponding author:

    Prof. Maged M. Yassin
    Faculty of Medicine, The Islamic University of Gaza P. O.
    Box 108, Gaza Strip, Palestine
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      05 Apr 2013
    • Date of issue
      2013
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