TOPIC: SYNOVIAL FLUID
Topic Outline:
1. Physiology and Composition of Synovial Fluid
2. Classification of Joint Disorders
3. Specimen Collection
4. Laboratory Testing
a. Macroscopic Evaluation
b. Microscopic Examination
c. Chemical Examination
d. Microbiology Examination
e. Serological Examination
PHYSIOLOGY
Synovial fluid
Synovium refers to the tissue lining synovial tendon sheaths, bursae, and
arthrodial joints, except for the articular surface.
It is composed of one to three cell layers that form a discontinuous surface
overlying fatty, fibrous, or periosteal joint tissue
Synovial = syn (like) + ovia (egg)
It is referred to as "joint fluid" is a viscous liquid found in the joint cavities of the
movable joints (diarthroses).
Refers to the tissue lining synovial tendon sheaths, bursae and diarthrodial joints
except articular surface.
Functions
Lubrication for the movable joints: diarthroses
It is a lubricant and adhesive and provides nutrients for the avascular articular
cartilage.
Lessens shock of joint compression
Formation
Synovial fluid is formed as an ultrafiltrate of plasma across the synovial
membrane
The synovial membrane contains specialized cells called synoviocytes.
i. Synoviocytes secrete a mucopolysaccharide containing hyaluronic acid
and a small amount of protein (approximately one fourth of the plasma
concentration) into the fluid.
ii. The large hyaluronate molecules contribute the noticeable viscosity to the
synovial fluid.
Disorders
Damage to the articular membranes produces pain and stiffness in the joints, collectively
referred to as arthritis
Four classifications of disorders
I. Noninflammatory
Degenerative joint disorders, osteoarthritis
II. Inflammatory
Immunologic disorders, rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus
erythematosus, scleroderma, polymyositis, ankylosing spondylitis,
rheumatic fever, Lyme arthritis
Crystal-induced gout, pseudogout
III. Septic
Microbial infection
IV. Hemorrhagic
Traumatic injury, tumors, hemophilia, other coagulation disorders
Anticoagulant overdose
Clinical Significance
.Laboratory results of synovial fluid analysis can be used to determine the pathologic
origin of arthritis.
The beneficial tests most frequently performed on synovial fluid are the white
blood cell (WBC) count, differential, Gram stain, culture, and crystal examination.
Laboratory Findings in Joint Disorders
Group Classification Laboratory Findings
I. Noninflammatory Clear, yellow fluid
Good viscosity
WBCs <1000 L
Neutrophils <30%
Similar to blood glucose
II. Inflammatory
Cloudy, yellow fluid
Poor viscosity
WBCs 2,000 to 75,000 L
Immunologic Origin
Neutrophils >50%
Decreased glucose level
Possible autoantibodies present
Cloudy or milky fluid
Low viscosity
WBCs up to 100,000 L
Crystal-induced origin
Neutrophils <70%
Decreased glucose level
Crystals present
III. Septic Cloudy, yellow-green fluid
Variable viscosity
WBCs 50,000 to 100,000 L
Neutrophils >75%
Decreased glucose level
Positive culture and Gram stain
IV. Hemorrhagic Cloudy, red fluid
Low viscosity
WBCs equal to blood
Neutrophils equal to blood
Normal glucose level
SPECIMEN COLLECTION AND HANDLING
Collected by need aspiration called Arthrocentesis
Normal amount of fluid in the adult knee cavity is less than 3.5 mL, but can increase to
greater than 25 mL with inflammation.
Collect in sterile, disposable needles and plastic syringes
Tubes
Sterile heparinized or sodium polyanethol sulfonate for gram stain and culture
Liquid EDTA for hematology (Powdered anticoagulants should not be used)
Heparinizes or nonanticoagulated tube for other tests
i. It must be centrifuged and separated to prevent cellular elements from
interfering with chemical and serologic analyses.
Sodium fluoride for glucose
All testing should be done as soon as possible to prevent cellular lysis and possible
changes in crystal
COLOR AND CLARITY
Appearance Indications
Clear and pale yellow (egg white) Normal
Deeper yellow Noninflammatory and inflammatory
Greenish tinge Bacterial infection
Red Hemorrhagic or traumatic tao
Turbidity White blood cells, synovial cell debris, fibrin
Milky Crystal induced
VISCOSITY
Synovial fluid viscosity comes from polymerization of the hyaluronic acid
o Essential for the proper joints lubrication
Arthritis decreases polymerization
Methods to measure the synovial fluid viscosity
o Observing fluid’s ability to form a string from the tip of a syringe
a test that easily can be done at the bedside
A string measuring 4 to 6 cm is considered normal
o Ropes or Mucin clot Test
a test that measured hyaluronate polymerization
Add fluid to 2% to 5% acetic acid to form clot
As the ability of the hyaluronate to polymerize decreases, the clot
becomes less firm, and the surrounding fluid increases in turbidity.
Reported in terms:
good (solid clot)
fair (soft clot)
low (friable clot)
poor (no clot)
Formation of a mucin clot after adding acetic acid can be used to identify
a questionable fluid as synovial fluid.
CELL COUNTS
Total leukocyte count is the most frequently performed cell count on synovial fluid
Counts should be performed as soon as possible, or the specimen should be
refrigerated
Very viscous fluid may need to be pretreated by adding one drop of 0.05%
hyaluronidase in phosphate buffer per milliliter of fluid and incubating at 37°C for 5
minutes
Do not use normal WBC diluting fluid; use saline/methylene blue
Perform on a Neubauer counting chamber
Counting Procedure
o Line a petri dish with moist paper and place the hemocytometer on two small
sticks to elevate it above the moist paper.
o Fill and count both sides of the hemocytometer for compatibility.
o Acceptable ranges are determined by the laboratory
For counts less than 200 WBCs/uL, count all 9 large squares.
For counts greater than 200 WBCs /uL in the above count, count the 4
corner squares.
For counts greater than 200 WBCs /uL in the above count, count the 5
small squares used for a RBC count
Automated cell counters can be used for synovial fluid counts
o Highly viscous fluid may block the apertures, and the presence of debris and
tissue cells may falsely elevate counts
WBC counts less than 200 cells/uL are considered normal and may reach 100,000
cells/uL or higher in severe infections
DIFFERENTIAL COUNT
Performed on cytocentrifuged preparations or on thinly smeared slides
Fluid should be incubated with hyaluronidase prior to slide preparation
Mononuclear cells, including monocytes, macrophages, and synovial tissue cells, are the
primary cells seen in normal synovial fluid.
Neutrophils: <25%, increase in sepsis
Lymphocytes: <15%, noninflammatory higher
In both normal and abnormal specimens, cells may appear more vacuolated than they
do on a blood smear.
Other cell abnormalities
o eosinophils
o LE cells
o Reiter cells (or neutrophages, vacuolated macrophages with ingested
neutrophils)
o RA cells (or ragocytes, neutrophils with small, dark cytoplasmic granules
consisting precipitated rheumatoid factor)
Lipid droplets may be present after crush injuries
Hemosiderin granules are seen in cases of pigmented villonodular synovitis
CRYSTAL IDENTIFICATION
important diagnostic test in evaluating arthritis
Crystal formation in a joint frequently results in an acute, painful inflammation or chronic
Causes of crystal formation
o metabolic disorders
o decreased renal excretion that produce elevated blood levels of crystallizing
chemicals
o degeneration of cartilage and bone, and injection of medications, such as
corticosteroids, into a joint
Types of crystals
o Primary crystal seen in synovial fluid
Monosodium urate (uric acid) (MSU) – gout
Increased serum uric acid resulting from impaired metabolism of
purine
increased consumption of high-purine-content foods, alcohol, and
fructose
chemotherapy treatment of leukemias
decreased renal excretion of uric acid
Calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate (CPPD) – Pseudogout
degenerative arthritis, producing cartilage calcification and
endocrine disorders that produce elevated serum calcium levels
o Hydroxyapatite (basic calcium phosphate)
calcified cartilage degeneration
needle shape
o Cholesterol crystals
chronic effusions from patients with osteoarthritis or RA
Notched, rhomboid plates shape
o Calcium oxalate crystals
seen in renal dialysis patients
envelopes shaped
o Corticosteroid
after injection
Flat, variable-shaped plates
o Apatite crystals
calcific periarthritis
osteoarthritis
inflammatory arthritis
Artifacts present may include talcum powder and starch from gloves, precipitated
anticoagulants, dust, and scratches on slides and cover slips.
Slides and cover slips should be examined and if necessary cleaned again before us
SLIDE PREPARATION
Examine ASAP
o Crystal changes, MSU and CPPD are seen intracellularly and cells disintegrate
Initial examination is wet preparation unstained under low and high power
Crystal may be seen differential
Crystals may be observed in Wright’s-stained smears
Use of polarized and red-compensated polarized light for identification
MSU crystals
o needle-shaped crystals.
o They may be extracellular or located within the cytoplasm of neutrophils.
o They are frequently seen sticking through the cytoplasm of the cell.
CPPD crystals
o rhomboid-shaped or square but may appear as short rods.
o usually located within vacuoles of the neutrophil
CRYSTAL POLARIZATION
Both MSU and CPPD crystals polarize light
MSU is highlu birefringent and appears brighter than CPPD
Confirm identification using compensated polarized light
Compensated Polarized Light
o a red compensator is placed in the microscope between the crystal and the
analyzer
o The compensator separates the light ray into slow moving and fast-moving
vibrations and produces a red background
o MSU crystals
run parallel to the long axis of the crystal
when aligned with the slow vibration, the velocity of the slow light passing
through the crystal is not impeded as much as the fast light, which runs
against the grain
produces a yellow color.
NEGATIVE BIREFRINGENCE
o CPPD crystals
run perpendicular to the long axis of the crystal
when aligned with the slow axis of the compensator, the velocity of the
fast light passing through the crystal is much quicker
producing a blue color
POSITIVE BIREFRINGENCE
CHEMISTRY TEST
Synovial fluid is chemically an ultrafiltrate of plasma, test values are approximately the
same as serum values
Glucose determination
o most frequently requested test
o markedly decreased glucose values indicate inflammatory (group II) or septic
(group III) disorders
o normal synovial fluid glucose values are based on the blood glucose level,
simultaneous blood
o synovial fluid samples should be obtained, preferably after the patient has fasted
for 8 hours to allow equilibration between the two fluids
o Normal: not less than 10 mg/dL of plasma glucose
Total protein determination
o large protein molecules are not filtered through the synovial membranes
o Normal synovial fluid contains less than 3 g/dL protein (approximately one third
of the serum value).
o Increased levels are found in inflammatory and hemorrhagic disorders; however,
synovial fluid protein measurement does not contribute greatly to the
classification of these disorders
Uric acid determination
o elevation of serum uric acid in cases of gout is well known
o elevated synovial fluid uric acid level may be used to confirm the diagnosis when
the presence of crystals cannot be demonstrated in the fluid.
o Serum uric acid is often measured as a first evaluation in suspected cases of
gout
Fluid lactate or acid phosphatase levels maybe requested to monitor the severity and
prognosis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA)
MICROBIOLOGIC TEST
Gram stains and cultures
o most important tests performed on synovial fluid
o Both tests must be performed on all specimens, as organisms are often missed
on Gram stain
Infectious organisms
o Bacteria
o Fungi
o Mycobacteria
o Viruses
Route of entry
o Bloodstream
o Penetrating wounds
o Osteomyelitis rupture
o Arthroscopy
o intra-articular steroid injections
o prosthetic joint surgery
SEROLOGIC TEST
important in the diagnosis of joint disorders
most of these tests are performed on serum
Synovial fluid analysis serves as a confirmatory measure in cases that are difficult to
diagnose
Demonstrating antibodies to the causative agent Borrelia burgdorferi in the patient’s
serum can confirm the cause of the arthritis.
Sources
Stransinger, S. & Di Lorenzo, M., Urinalysis and Body Fluids, Sixth Edition
Mundt, L. & Shanahan K., Graff’s Textbook of Urinalysis and Body Fluids, Second Edition