Selected article for: "able colleague and acute respiratory syndrome"

Author: Cossarizza, Andrea; Gibellini, Lara; De Biasi, Sara; Lo Tartaro, Domenico; Mattioli, Marco; Paolini, Annamaria; Fidanza, Lucia; Bellinazzi, Caterina; Borella, Rebecca; Castaniere, Ivana; Meschiari, Marianna; Sita, Marco; Manco, Gianrocco; Clini, Enrico; Gelmini, Roberta; Girardis, Massimo; Guaraldi, Giovanni; Mussini, Cristina
Title: Handling and Processing of Blood Specimens from Patients with COVID‐19 for Safe Studies on Cell Phenotype and Cytokine Storm
  • Cord-id: uptfhv4h
  • Document date: 2020_4_10
  • ID: uptfhv4h
    Snippet: The pandemic caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 heavily involves all those working in a laboratory. Samples from known infected patients or donors who are considered healthy can arrive, and a colleague might be asymptomatic but able to transmit the virus. Working in a clinical laboratory is posing several safety challenges. Few years ago, International Society for Advancement of Cytometry published guidelines to safely analyze and sort human samples that were revised in th
    Document: The pandemic caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 heavily involves all those working in a laboratory. Samples from known infected patients or donors who are considered healthy can arrive, and a colleague might be asymptomatic but able to transmit the virus. Working in a clinical laboratory is posing several safety challenges. Few years ago, International Society for Advancement of Cytometry published guidelines to safely analyze and sort human samples that were revised in these days. We describe the procedures that we have been following since the first patient appeared in Italy, which have only slightly modified our standard one, being all human samples associated with risks. © 2020 International Society for Advancement of Cytometry

    Search related documents:
    Co phrase search for related documents
    • Try single phrases listed below for: 1