Tue May 21, 2024 2:59 pm by rhannan
Hi Hiran!
My group processes pleural effusions and occasionally ascites. Depending on the px, these fluids can be extremely acellular and the volumes vary wildly. Even with a draw chock full of cells >0.5E6 cells/mL, we still spin down + wash cells prior to counting and resuspension for cryopreservation or immediate staining. If you need to record cellularity of the fluid (always do this!) a final cell count and an initial fluid volume is all you need to back-calculate a concentration. If there was saline used to flush the cavity + ended up in your sample, make sure to account for that exogenous volume (physiologic volume + flush volume = sample volume).
My rule is to process as much volume as possible, or as much as you can get, to maximize the # of cells. If you can get an initial count prior to concentrating, that can guide your decision on how much volume to process.Typically have to do a series of 300xg spins + washes to consolidate the cells into a single tube. RBC lyse if necessary, and then you're off to the races just like you would be with PBMCs. Stain or cryopreserve to your heart's content.
Sadly this work isn't up online, otherwise I'd be happy to link you a paper to reference.
Hope that helps