An automated analyser is a laboratory machine designed to measure different chemicals in a number of biological samples quickly, with minimal human assistance.
The chemicals and other qualities of blood and other fluid measured may be useful in the diagnosis of disease.
Different methods of putting samples through have been invented, but usually involve placing test tubes of sample into racks, which can be moved along a track, or circular carousels that rotate to make the sample available. To protect the health and safety of laboratory staff many analysers feature closed tube sampling to prevent workers from direct exposure to samples.
Samples can be processed in batches, or continuously.
The types of tests required are often enzyme levels (such as many of the liver function tests), ion levels (e.g. sodium and potassium), and other tell-tale chemicals (such as albumin or creatinine).
Simple ions are done with ion selective electrodes, that let one type of ion through, and measure voltage differences. Enzymes are measured by the rate they change one coloured substance to another; the results for enzymes are given as an activity, not a concentration of enzyme. Other tests use colorimetric changes to determine the concentration.
Turbidity (as created when an antibody reacts with a test compound) can also be measured with these machines.
Examples of these types of machines are:
The concentration of these compounds is often too low to cause a measurable increase in turbidity when bound to antibody, so other, more specialised, methods must be used.
Optical detection is utilised to gain a differential count of the populations of white cell types. A dilute suspension of cells is passed through a flow cell, which passes cells one at a time through a capillary tube past a laser beam. The reflectance, transmission and scattering of light from each cell is analysed by sophisticated software giving a numerical representation of the likely overall distribution of cell populations.
Reticulocyte counts can be performed by many analysers, but are just as often carried out manually by staining blood in a Merrett tube and performing a cell count under the microscope. Some analysers have a modular slide maker which is able to both produce a blood film of consistent quality and stain the film.
Examples of full blood count machines are:
Coagulation machines include:
Automatic ESR readers, while not strictly analysers, hold a rack of samples for an hour, then after an hour determine how far the red cells have fallen, by detecting levels with light beams.
As ESR tests become less popular they are being replaced by Plasma Viscosity tests. The advantage of this test over ESR is that less variables can affect the result so it can give a more direct impression of the plasma protein content of a sample. The analysers commonly work by drawing a small sample of plasma through a narrow capillary using a constant pressure and measuring the time taken for the sample to move a known distance.
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