Comparing Leishman and Giemsa staining for the assessment of peripheral blood smear preparations in a malaria-endemic region in India

Background: Microscopy of peripheral blood thin and thick films remains the reference for malaria diagnosis. Although Giemsa staining is most commonly used, the Leishman staining method provides better visualization of the nuclear chromatin pattern of cells. It is less well known whether accuracy...

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Main Authors: Sanghamitra Sathpathi, Mohanty, Akshaya K, Parthasarathi Satpathi, Mishra, Saroj K, Behera, Prativa K, Goutam Patel, Dondorp, Arjen M
Other Authors: Mahidol University. Faculty of Tropical Medicine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/2902
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spelling th-mahidol.29022023-03-30T13:09:39Z Comparing Leishman and Giemsa staining for the assessment of peripheral blood smear preparations in a malaria-endemic region in India Sanghamitra Sathpathi Mohanty, Akshaya K Parthasarathi Satpathi Mishra, Saroj K Behera, Prativa K Goutam Patel Dondorp, Arjen M Mahidol University. Faculty of Tropical Medicine Open Access article Comparing Leishman Giemsa staining assessment smear preparations malaria-endemic region Background: Microscopy of peripheral blood thin and thick films remains the reference for malaria diagnosis. Although Giemsa staining is most commonly used, the Leishman staining method provides better visualization of the nuclear chromatin pattern of cells. It is less well known whether accuracy of parasitaemia assessment is equally accurate with the latter method. Methods: Peripheral blood thin and thick smears from consecutive febrile patients admitted to Ispat General hospital, Rourkela, Odhisa, India, were stained with Giemsa and Leishman stain. Methods were compared for species identification, parasite quantification, and ability for identification of alternative diagnoses. Results: Blood films from 1,180 fever patients were compared according to staining method, of which 111 were identified as parasitaemic using Giemsa and 110 with Leishman staining. The Kappa value as a measure of agreement between methods was 0.995 (p < 0.001), and the log10parasitaemia between methods were strongly correlated (r2 = 0.9981). In parasite negative patients, thin smear assessment contributed to making a diagnosis in 276/1,180 (23%) of cases. These assessments were better made in Leishman-stained preparations, especially for the assessment of morphological changes in red and white cells. Conclusion: Leishman’s staining method for thin and thick smears is a good alternative to Giemsa’s stain for identifying Plasmodium parasites. The Leishman method is superior for visualization of red and white blood cell morphology. 2017-10-25T03:25:06Z 2017-10-25T03:25:06Z 2017-10-25 2014 Research Article BMC Public Health. Vol.13, (2014), 512 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/2902 eng Mahidol University BioMed Central application/pdf
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
language English
topic Open Access article
Comparing Leishman
Giemsa staining
assessment
smear preparations
malaria-endemic region
spellingShingle Open Access article
Comparing Leishman
Giemsa staining
assessment
smear preparations
malaria-endemic region
Sanghamitra Sathpathi
Mohanty, Akshaya K
Parthasarathi Satpathi
Mishra, Saroj K
Behera, Prativa K
Goutam Patel
Dondorp, Arjen M
Comparing Leishman and Giemsa staining for the assessment of peripheral blood smear preparations in a malaria-endemic region in India
description Background: Microscopy of peripheral blood thin and thick films remains the reference for malaria diagnosis. Although Giemsa staining is most commonly used, the Leishman staining method provides better visualization of the nuclear chromatin pattern of cells. It is less well known whether accuracy of parasitaemia assessment is equally accurate with the latter method. Methods: Peripheral blood thin and thick smears from consecutive febrile patients admitted to Ispat General hospital, Rourkela, Odhisa, India, were stained with Giemsa and Leishman stain. Methods were compared for species identification, parasite quantification, and ability for identification of alternative diagnoses. Results: Blood films from 1,180 fever patients were compared according to staining method, of which 111 were identified as parasitaemic using Giemsa and 110 with Leishman staining. The Kappa value as a measure of agreement between methods was 0.995 (p < 0.001), and the log10parasitaemia between methods were strongly correlated (r2 = 0.9981). In parasite negative patients, thin smear assessment contributed to making a diagnosis in 276/1,180 (23%) of cases. These assessments were better made in Leishman-stained preparations, especially for the assessment of morphological changes in red and white cells. Conclusion: Leishman’s staining method for thin and thick smears is a good alternative to Giemsa’s stain for identifying Plasmodium parasites. The Leishman method is superior for visualization of red and white blood cell morphology.
author2 Mahidol University. Faculty of Tropical Medicine
author_facet Mahidol University. Faculty of Tropical Medicine
Sanghamitra Sathpathi
Mohanty, Akshaya K
Parthasarathi Satpathi
Mishra, Saroj K
Behera, Prativa K
Goutam Patel
Dondorp, Arjen M
format Article
author Sanghamitra Sathpathi
Mohanty, Akshaya K
Parthasarathi Satpathi
Mishra, Saroj K
Behera, Prativa K
Goutam Patel
Dondorp, Arjen M
author_sort Sanghamitra Sathpathi
title Comparing Leishman and Giemsa staining for the assessment of peripheral blood smear preparations in a malaria-endemic region in India
title_short Comparing Leishman and Giemsa staining for the assessment of peripheral blood smear preparations in a malaria-endemic region in India
title_full Comparing Leishman and Giemsa staining for the assessment of peripheral blood smear preparations in a malaria-endemic region in India
title_fullStr Comparing Leishman and Giemsa staining for the assessment of peripheral blood smear preparations in a malaria-endemic region in India
title_full_unstemmed Comparing Leishman and Giemsa staining for the assessment of peripheral blood smear preparations in a malaria-endemic region in India
title_sort comparing leishman and giemsa staining for the assessment of peripheral blood smear preparations in a malaria-endemic region in india
publishDate 2017
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/2902
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