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7.2: Blood Smear Examples

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    105945
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    Blood smear examples

    Here are a few examples of common organisms found on the blood film of veterinary patients in the United States:

    Table 7.1: Common organisms found on the blood film of United States veterinary patients; *picture of the organism in the text below
    Organism
    Species found in
    Where it is found (intra/extracellular)
    Magnification easiest found at
    Location on blood smear
    Parasitic
    Dirofilaria immitus Canine, Feline Extracellular 10x Feathered edge
    Trypanosoma sp. Canine, Bovine Extracellular 40x Monolayer
    Babesia sp.* Canine, bovine RBC 40x, 100x Monolayer
    Cytauxzoon felis* Feline RBC (piroplasms), monocytes (schizonts) 100x Monolayer (piroplasms), Feathered edge (schizonts)
    Bacteria
    Anaplasma phagocytophilum Canine, equine Neutrophils, eosinophils 40x Monolayer
    Anaplasma marginale* Bovine RBC 40x, 100x Monolayer
    Ehrlichia ewingii Canine Neutrophils, eosinophils 40x, 100x Monolayer
    Ehrlichia canis Canine Monocytes, lymphocytes 40x, 100x Monolayer
    Mycoplasma sp. (M. haemofelis, M. haemolamae, M. canis) Canine, feline, camelids, many others Surface of RBC’s 100x Monolayer
    Fungal
    Histoplasma capsulatum* Canine Monocytes 40x, 100x Feathered edge, sometimes monolayer

    Visual atlas

    Here is a visual atlas of some of the organisms described in the table.

    Large variant Babesia sp. in RBC of a canine blood smear (monolayer) at 100x
    Babesia sp. in RBC of a canine blood smear (monolayer) using the 100x objective lens (oil).
    Histoplasma capsulatum in a monocyte on the feathered edge at 40x
    Histoplasma capsulatum yeast within a monocyte on the feathered edge using the 100x objective lens (oil).
    Cytauxzoon felis in feline RBC's in the monolayer at 100x
    Cytauxzoon felis piroplasms within feline RBC’s in the monolayer using a 100x objective lens (oil).
    Anaplasma marginale in the RBC of a bovine blood smear (monolayer) at 100x.
    Anaplasma marginale morulae within an RBC of a bovine blood smear (monolayer) using a 100x objective lens.

    Knowledge check

    Query \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Query \(\PageIndex{2}\)


    Key Takeaways

    • Always begin by scanning the feathered edge at low power (10x objective) to identify large organisms (i.e. microfilariae, schizonts, macrophages with intracellular yeast)
    • Organisms are largely predictable and have cells they prefer to invade and replicate in
    • Small Intracellular pathogens are easiest to identify in the monolayer
    • We use cytologic stains to screen for pathogens

    This page titled 7.2: Blood Smear Examples is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Erin Burton and Anna Lalande via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.