Quality Control & Lab Safety
Hematology & CBC
Lipids & Glucose Testing
Immunology & Infectious Disease
Procedures & Clinical Application
100

What is the main purpose of quality control in the laboratory?

Ensure test results are accurate and reliable

100

What is the primary function of hemoglobin?

Transport oxygen

100

What is the role of LDL cholesterol?

Carries cholesterol to cells

100

What substance binds to an antigen?

Antibody

100

Where should hematocrit results be read?

Top of the red blood cell column

200

A control result is outside the expected range. What is your next step?

Stop testing and troubleshoot before running patient samples

200

Which condition is most associated with low hemoglobin levels?

Anemia

200

What is a major purpose of a lipid panel?

Assess risk for coronary artery disease

200

What is a common transmission route for mononucleosis?

Saliva

200

Why should the first drop of blood be wiped away during capillary collection?

Prevent contamination with tissue fluid

300

Why is documenting invalid results important even if testing is repeated?

Maintains lab accuracy and traceability of errors

300

What part of the centrifuged blood contains WBCs and platelets?

Buffy coat

300

Why must patients fast before certain lab tests like lipid panels?

Food affects glucose and lipid levels

300

What test is commonly used to screen for syphilis?

RPR or VDRL

300

What happens if a capillary tube is pressed too firmly against the finger?

Blood will not flow into the tube

400

A test result is inconsistent with patient symptoms. What should you suspect first?

Possible lab error or QC issue

400

A patient has a WBC count of 14,500. What does this indicate?

Leukocytosis

400

A patient has very low HDL. Why is this concerning?

Increased risk of cardiovascular disease

400

Why is a blood specimen used for mono testing instead of saliva?

Detects antibodies in blood

400

Why must PT/INR tubes be filled completely?

Prevent inaccurate results

500

A clinic continues testing despite failed controls. What is the biggest risk?

Reporting inaccurate patient results leading to incorrect treatment

500

A patient undergoing chemotherapy develops a low WBC count. What is this called and why is it dangerous?

Leukopenia; increased infection risk

500

Why is nonfasting lipid testing now often acceptable in clinical practice?

Most values (especially total cholesterol & HDL) are minimally affected by food

500

A patient tests positive for mono. How would you explain transmission in professional terms?

Spread through direct contact with infected saliva

500

A patient on warfarin has an INR of 3.5. What does this indicate?

Blood is too thin → increased bleeding risk