A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY EVALUATION OF DIAGNOSTIC IMPLICATIONS OF PLATELET INDICES IN THROMBOCYTOPENIA.

Authors

  • Dr. Jayanti Nayak Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.
  • Dr. Bodhisatwa Behera Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.
  • Dr. Saroj Ranjan Mohanty Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.
  • Dr. Manoj Kumar Patro MKCG MCH Brahmapur, Odisha, 760004.
  • Dr. Kiran Singh Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.
  • Dr. Lalit Kumar Meher Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51168/sjhrafrica.v4i6.490

Keywords:

Thrombocytopenia (TCP), Mean Platelet Volume (MPV), Platelet Distribution Width (PDW), Plateletcrit (PCT), Platelet large cell ratio (P-LCR)

Abstract

Introduction:

Thrombocytopenia (TCP) refers to a reduction of platelet count below 150 x 109/ L; it’s not a disease entity by itself, but a finding that may result from a number of disease processes. Automated hematology analyzers that determine the Mean Platelet Volume (MPV), Platelet Distribution Width (PDW), Plateletcrit (PCT), and Platelet Large Cell Ratio (P-LCR), could be very helpful to facilitate the differential diagnosis of thrombocytopenia and to monitor thrombocytopenic conditions.

Materials and methods:

A cross-sectional study of platelet indices of 512 thrombocytopenic samples by automated hematology analyzers was done.

Results:

The cases of thrombocytopenia were classified into hypo-productive (362 cases) and hyper-destructive (150) groups. A most common cause of hypo-productive and hyper-destructive thrombocytopenia was Aplastic anemia and ITP, respectively. All the indices were significantly higher (p-value < 0.05) in hyper-destructive TCP compared to hypo-productive TCP, except Plateletcrit.

Conclusion:

The results of the present study show platelet indices to be a useful and reliable test to differentiate between hyper-destructive thrombocytopenia from the hypo-productive type with statistically significant differences.

Author Biographies

Dr. Jayanti Nayak, Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.

Associate Professor, Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.

Dr. Bodhisatwa Behera, Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.

Associate Professor of Pathology, SLN MCH Koraput

Dr. Saroj Ranjan Mohanty, Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.

Assistant Professor, Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.

Dr. Manoj Kumar Patro, MKCG MCH Brahmapur, Odisha, 760004.

Associate Professor of Pathology, Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha. 760004.

Dr. Kiran Singh, Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.

PG Resident, Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.

Dr. Lalit Kumar Meher, Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.

Professor of Medicine, Department of Pathology, MKCG Medical College and Hospital, Brahmapur, Odisha.

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Published

2023-06-29

How to Cite

Nayak, J. ., Behera, B. ., Mohanty, S. R. M., Patro, M. K. ., Singh, K. ., & Meher, L. K. (2023). A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY EVALUATION OF DIAGNOSTIC IMPLICATIONS OF PLATELET INDICES IN THROMBOCYTOPENIA. Student’s Journal of Health Research Africa, 4(6), 9. https://doi.org/10.51168/sjhrafrica.v4i6.490

Issue

Section

Section of Haematology and Blood transfusion science