Wilson J W, Stevens J B
J Am Vet Med Assoc. 1977 Aug 1;171(3):256-8.
Data were obtained from 190 cerebrospinal fluid samples collected from both clinically normal and diseased dogs, cats, cows, and horses. Red blood cells, indicating blood contamination, were identified in 115 samples. White blood cells were a rare finding in normal animals. Blood contamination appeared to have little effect on white blood cell numbers even though, in several samples, thousands of red blood cells were identified. An accepted formula to correct for blood contamination was found to be an unreliable method to determine "uncontaminated" values for white blood cells, total protein, or creatine phosphokinase.
数据取自190份从临床正常及患病的犬、猫、牛和马采集的脑脊液样本。在115份样本中发现了表明存在血液污染的红细胞。白细胞在正常动物中很少见。尽管在几份样本中发现了数千个红细胞,但血液污染似乎对白细胞数量影响不大。一种公认的校正血液污染的公式被发现是一种不可靠的方法,无法确定白细胞、总蛋白或肌酸磷酸激酶的“未受污染”值。