| Literature DB >> 9031850 |
H J Tanke1, J C Oosterwijk, W E Mesker, M C Ouwerkerk van-Velzen, C F Knepflé, C C Wiesmeyer, G J van Ommen, H H Kanhai, J Vrolijk.
Abstract
This paper describes the use of automated microscopy to detect fetal erythroblasts in maternal blood. The technology is based on the following approach: (1) the use of centrifugal cytology for the preparation of monolayers; (2) simultaneous staining of fetal hemoglobin (immunoalkaline phosphatase) and chromosome sequences (FISH); (3) multi-mode microscopy to detect rare events; (4) visual evaluation of image memories containing detected objects. Model systems show that fetal cells in frequencies as low as 1 in a million cells can be detected easily (manually or by automated microscopy). Algorithms for automated cell selection were developed for a test set of 6 patients. Optimization of hardware and software routines will make analysis of several million cells in approximately 1 h feasible.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1996 PMID: 9031850 DOI: 10.1016/s0378-3782(96)01829-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Early Hum Dev ISSN: 0378-3782 Impact factor: 2.079