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Platelet Detection Procedure in Human Peripheral Blood and Precautions

Source: Elabscience®Published: Jan 01,1970

Procedure

1. Collect human peripheral blood samples into sodium citrate anticoagulant tubes.

2. Add 5 μL of fresh whole blood, 1 Test of flow cytometry antibody, and 200 μL of PBS into the centrifuge tube. Mix thoroughly and incubate at room temperature in the dark for 30 min.

3. Add 1 mL PBS to the centrifuge tube, gently vortex to mix, and proceed immediately to flow cytometric analysis.

Platelet Detection Procedure in Human Peripheral Blood and Precautions-1

Figure 1. Detection results of platelet marker CD61 in human peripheral blood

 

Precautions

1. Preferred anticoagulants: Citrate-based tubes (e.g., ACD tubes) or CTAD tubes. Avoid heparin and EDTA (EDTA induces platelet activation).

2. Use a large-bore needle (e.g., 18G) for blood collection to minimize mechanical activation.

3. Store collected samples at room temperature (15–25 °C). Temperatures below 4 °C can alter platelet morphology.

4. Time sensitivity: Perform analysis within 3 hours of collection. Delays can significantly reduce the expression of platelet-specific markers (e.g., CD62P).

5. Red blood cell lysis is not required.

6. Platelet FSC/SSC values are lower than those of red blood cells; adjust the flow cytometer threshold accordingly before acquisition.

7. Using logarithmic scales for both FSC and SSC facilitates platelet gating.