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Mononucleosis Information and Courses from MediaLab, Inc.

These are the MediaLab courses that cover Mononucleosis and links to relevant pages within the course.

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Laboratories Individuals

CLIA Blood Banking Review
Which of the following conditions is most frequently associated with anti-I:View Page
Which of the following antigen groups is closely related to the ABO system:View Page

CLIA Chemistry / Urinalysis Review
The following LDH Isoenzyme pattern would be seen in:View Page
The following LDH Isoenzyme pattern would be seen in:View Page
The following LDH Isoenzyme pattern would be seen in:View Page

CLIA General Laboratory Review
The most common rapid slide test (MONOSPOTâ) for infectious mononucleosis employs:View Page
A patient with atypical (reactive) lymphocytes in his peripheral blood smear should be tested for:View Page

CLIA Hematology / Hemostasis Review
Which of the following conditions might give rise to the red cell abnormality depicted here:View Page
Which of the following is not primarily a hemolytic process?View Page
Which of the following is least likely to stimulate the production of reactive lymphocytes:View Page

CLIA Microbiology / Serology Review
Match the virus with its associated disease:View Page

Introduction to Bone Marrow
Bone marrow examination may be used to aid in the diagnosis of:View Page

White Cell and Platelet Disorders: Peripheral Blood Clues to Nonneoplastic Conditions
An increase in peripheral blood monocytes with an appearance similar to the cell in the photograph is highly suggestive of infectious mononucleosis.View Page
Additional comments on this exercise

The following pages in this presentation includes a series of white blood cell abnormalities that may be identified in a peripheral blood smear. Many of the cases will simulate the practice of a peripheral smear review by a hematology morphologist. He/she must asses what responses in patient care may be triggered by the clinician attempting to interpret the reported findings on a peripheral smearObservations of white blood cell abnormalities in the peripheral blood smear should be reported so as to direct the physician to an immediate specific diagnosis, such as: (1) atypical lymphocytes suggesting infectious mononucleosis rather than leukemia, (2) toxic granules in neutrophils as in acute infections, or atypical granules suggesting a genetic disorder, (3) an unusual mix of cells, such as too many or too few neutrophils, monocytes, or other myeloid cells, and (4) the presence of giant platelets, myelocytes, or other cells suggesting a myelodysplastic syndrome.In summary, laboratory data should be presented to clinicians in a user friendly way to promote effective decision making. The design of the data base of information must be directed toward providing clinically helpful information clearly and quickly in order to facilitate appropriate action in terms of optimizing patient care outcomes.d

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A peripheral smear was submitted for morphology/clinical because of the number of monocytes as captured in the upper and lower photographs. This picture is consistent with each of the following conditions except:View Page
Case history

A 14 year-old boy came to the physician's office with a sore throat that progressively worsened over a three day period. His posterior pharynx was swollen ,shiney and erythematous. The boy complained of pain on swallowing. His temperature was 98.5F. A rapid direct streptococcal antigen test was positive. However, his symptoms did not subside over the next two days while on antibiotic therapy. Anorexia and nausea were persistent and compounded by a frontal headache. Cervical lymph nodes became noticeably enlarged. The results of the CBC were: WBC 11.9/mm3 with 17% segmented neutrophils, 5% bands, 72%(60% atypical--see photograph)lymphocytes and 6%monocytes. All red cell findings were normal. A monospot test was positive. This is a case of group-A streptococcal infection superimposed on infectious mononucleosis. Symptoms subsided in 3 weeks following completion of the antibiotic therapy.

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The large blue staining cells represented here in the photographs comprise 50% of the total white blood count.This picture is most consistent with:View Page


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