
image: Aspergillus symplast
When a CBC (complete blood count) is ordered as a routine test for the patient, the sample is run through a machine and analyzed with results for numbers of white blood cells, red blood cells, type of cells, and indices of the blood and platelets. What we refer to simply (and impotently) as "stain precipitate", your language of science identifies, sorts, and categorizes, cells as fibrous thallus, symplast, mucor, rbc & platelet aggregation and mycoplasma. You then go on to explain the significance of these phenomena when found in the patient's sample and offer suggestions to overcome their implications. Read more
No comments:
Post a Comment