Physiology 1 Practical Notebook Submitted To: Dr. Aniza Ishaque Submitted By: Momina Nadeem Rimsha Zareen Abdullah Najam Aman Sarfraz
Physiology 1 Practical Notebook Submitted To: Dr. Aniza Ishaque Submitted By: Momina Nadeem Rimsha Zareen Abdullah Najam Aman Sarfraz
Physiology 1 Practical Notebook Submitted To: Dr. Aniza Ishaque Submitted By: Momina Nadeem Rimsha Zareen Abdullah Najam Aman Sarfraz
Practical Notebook
Submitted to:
Dr. Aniza Ishaque
Submitted by:
Momina Nadeem
Rimsha Zareen
Abdullah Najam
Aman Sarfraz
Blood group
RBC count
Bleeding time
Clotting time
Experiment No. 1
Microscope:
Objective:
To determine the method of setting up a binocular light microscope for visualizing a specimen.
Types of Microscope:
1) Compound Microscope
2) Digital Microscope
3) Multi-Head Microscope
4) Minutia Microscope
Definition:
A microscope is an instrument designed to produce magnified, visual or photographic image
of small objects.
Light Microscope:
It is used to focus light and lenses to magnify a specimen, usually a cell.
Electron Microscope:
A microscope with high magnification and resolution employed electronic beans in phase of
light and using electron lens
Procedure:
i. Focusing the object up to 10x-40x.
ii. Place the specimen. Slide on stage between stage holding clips.
iii. Not viewing through eye piece, using coarse adjustment knob, raise the stage until
it close to the objective lens.
iv. Not viewing through the eyepiece, lower the stage very slowly, using coarse
adjustment knob until a blurred image of the field appears.
v. Setting up the microscope for critical illumination.
vi. Choose a low power objective.
vii. Focus on a slide, loose the light source to minimum.
viii. Close the iris diaphragm on the condenser to its minimum
ix. Open the light sources until fills the whole field of view remove the field eye
piece, look down the tube and open the iris
x. Adjust the light intensity to suit the personal performance.
Experiment No. 2
Estimation of Hemoglobin
Hemoglobin:
It is the oxygen carrying, conjugated protein that gives whole body its red color. Each RBR
contain about 280 million hemoglobin molecules.
Structure of Hemoglobin:
A hemoglobin molecule consist of
Function of Hemoglobin:
1) Transport of oxygen:
Each oxygen molecule picked up from the lungs is bound to an iron ion. As blood flows
through the tissue capillaries, the iron oxygen reaction reverses. HB releases oxygen
which diffuses first in interstitial fluid and then into cell
2) Transport of CO2 :
Hemoglobin also transports about 23% of total CO2, and a waste product of
metabolism. as blood flows through the lungs, carbon dioxide is released from
hemoglobin and then exhaled.
SAHLI'S Method:
This method is roughly used in physiological laboratories
APPARATUS:
Procedure
1) Place 5 to 8 drops of N/10HCL in a graduated HB tube up to the mark 20%
2) Get a finger prick under espetic condition and always the first to 2 drops
3) a large drop of free floating blood has form again then place the HP of HB pipette on drop of
blood.
4) When a large drop free floating blood has found again, then place the HP of HB fit on drop
of blood.
5) Gently blood to the mark 20 withdraw the prepared from the table, touching at the side of the
tube does and sure that no mixture carries out of the tube.
6) Mixer blood with acid solution with flat and of the stirrer.
7) Folder comparator at eye level away from your face, against draught but diffused light, read
the scale at lower ministers of the fluid in the HB tube.
8) Record the reading.
Observation and Results:
Report your result as:
Normal Value:
Westergen’s Method
Apparatus:
Westergen’s tube, petri dish, 3.8% sodium citrate, spiritswab and disposable syringe.
Procedure:
Introduce yourself, take consent and explain what you are going to do.
Add 3.8% sodium citrate in a petri dish.
Draw 1.6cc/ml of venous blood under aseptic measure and transfer this blood to petri
dish and mix content gently
Draw blood in the westergen’s tube exactly upto the zero mark after placing finger tip
over the top westergen’s tube
Place the tube vertically in the ESR stand by firmly pressing its lower and into rubber
caushion while keeping your finger over the westergen’s tube rack.
Leave westergen’s tube undisturbed for one hour and than note the length of the column
of the clear plasma at the top of RBSs at the end of first hour.
Precautions:
The tube should be absolutely verticle, otherwise slight deviation may result in false
reading.
Avoid air bubbles in the column of blood.
Avoid clotting of blood while mixing of anticoagulant.
The westergen’s tube must be filled up to mark zero
Wintrobe’s Method
Apparatus:
Disposable syringe and needle. Sterilized cotton swap. Container with double oxalate
mixture, Pasteur pipette with thin long nozzle and wintrobe’s tube
Procedure:
Draw 2.0ml of venous blood under aseptic technique and transfer it to a container contain
anticoagulant.
Mix the content gently, but well by inverting the container a few time or by swirling it
Do not shake a well cause frothing.
Using the pasture pipette, fill the wintrobe’s tube from below upward.
Ensure that there are not bubbles.
Transfer the tube to it stand and adjust the screw so that it will remain verticle.
Leave the tube undisturbed in this position for one hour
At the end of witch the mm of clear plasma above the red cells.
Normal values:
Procedure:
Pick your finger with a sterile lancent to obtain a drop of blood under aseptic measure.
Discard the first drop onto an alcohol swab and dispose of this properly in a designated.
Obtain a heparinized capillary tube (heparin is an anticoagulant).
Notes that one end of the tube is marked with a red blood.
Allowing blood to enter the tube by capillary action and gravity
The tube does not have to be completely fill (half fill or more is adequate) and air bubble
are not important
Seal the red-banded end of the capillary tube by gently pushing it upright into the clay
capillary relant.
Care fully rotate and remove the tube.
Place the sealed capillary tube in a numbered slot of the micro capillary the plugged end
of the capillary tube facing outward against the rubber gas kept.
Screw to top plate onto the centrifuge head and centrifuge for 3-5 mints.
Determine the hematocrit reader provided at the end of the centrifugation and enter this
value in your work book
Precautions:
Requirements:
Sterile lancets
Cotton
Rectified spirit
Filter paper
Stop watch
Procedure:
Duke’s method: Sterilize the finger tip using rectified spirit and allow to dry. Make a
sufficiently deep prick using a sterile lancet, so that blood comes out freely without squeezing.
Note the time (start the stop-watch) when bleeding starts. Mop the blood by touching the finger
tip with a filter paper. This is repeated every 15 seconds, each time using a fresh portion of the
filter paper, till bleeding stops. Note the time (stop the stop-watch). It is seen that the blood stains
on the filter paper get smaller to disappear finally when bleeding stops.
Discussion:
Bleeding time is the interval between the moment when bleeding starts and the moment when
bleeding stops. Normal bleeding time (Duke’s method) is into 4 minutes. Bleeding time is
prolonged in purpuras, but normal in coagulation disorders like hemophilia. Purpuras can be due
to:
Platelets are important in preventing small vessel bleeding by causing vaso constriction and
platelet plug formation.
Other method:
Ivy’s method: Apply the sphygmomanometer cuff to the arm. Raise the cuff pressure and
maintain at 40 mm of Hg. Under sterile conditions make a deep prick on the forearm just below
the elbow. Bleeding time is noted as in Duke’s method.
Result:
Experiment No. 8:
CLOTTING TIME
AIM
Requirements:
Fine capillary glass tubes of about 10 mm length, cotton, rectified spirit, lancet, stop watch.
Procedure:
Under sterile precautions make a sufficiently deep prick in the finger tip. Note the time when
bleeding starts (start the stop watch). Touch the blood drop at the finger tip using one end of the
capillary tube kept tilted downwards. The tube gets easily filled by capillary action. After about
two minutes start snapping off small lengths of the tube, at intervals of 15 seconds, each time
noting whether the fibrin thread is formed between the snapped ends. Note the time (stop the
stop watch) when the fibrin thread is first seen.
Discussion:
Clotting time is the interval between the moment when bleeding starts and the moment when the
fibrin thread is first seen.
Bleeding time and clotting time are not the same. Bleeding time depends on the integrity of
platelets and vessel walls, whereas clotting time depends on the availability of coagulation
factors. In coagulation disorders like haemophilia, clotting time is prolonged but bleeding time
remains normal.
Clotting time is also prolonged in conditions like vitamin K deficiency, liver diseases,
disseminated intravascular coagulation, overdosage of anticoagulants etc.
Other method:
RESULT: