Hematology Exam 2
These mature in the tissues into macrophages primarily for phagocytosis but are also capable of compounds __________________involved in various immunity processes ________________
(monocytes) complement, interferon killer role, tumor destruction
The average time that a neutrophil spends in the peripheral blood
10 hours
monocytes spend how long in the blood in route to the tissues
12 hours
Although the monocyte is LARGE _______________in size the macrophage (histocyte) ranges ________________ in size
12-20; 15-80
platelets that are in the systemic circulating pool______________ and in the spleen_____________
2/3; 1/3
Eosinohils have _________________ in the tissues for each one that is in the blood
300-500
Not counted in the white count
50% that adhere to the walls of the blood vessels (marginal pool)
When circulating _____________of the neutrophils circulate freely _____________and ______________adhere to the walls of the blood vessels__________________
50%; circulating pool; 50%; marginal pool
Hypersegmantation
6 or more lobes seen in SEGMENTED NEUTROPHILS May be acquired (B12 and folic acid deficiencies), chronic infections or rarely inherited representing abnormal cellular maturation
Chediak-Higashi syndrome
A rare fatal hereditary disorder found in children making them prone to infections PRIMARLY DUE TO THE NEUTROPHILS impaired function NEUTROPHILS MONOCYTES AND LYMPHOCYTES ARE EFFECTED with large granules with are bluish-purple in neutrophils and reddish purple in monocytes and lymphocytes
Auer rods
Rod like bodies that stain reddish purple and found in the cytoplasm of blast cells in acute myelogenous, monocytic and erythroblstic leukemias
Toxic granulation
Seen primarily in neutrophils (rarely monocytes) seen in acute infections, drug poisoning and burns
Degenerated neutrophil with pyknotic nucleus
NEUTROPHIL have very round small segments representing nuclear degeneration. May be seen on slides made with old blood (cell death) NOT COUNTED IN DIFF
Monocyte
Nuclei take different shapes from brainy convolutions to lobulated and s shaped chromatin is open lose weaved lacy open and thin the cytoplasm is abundant grey blue with moderate nonspecific granules may show and area of protrusion may have numerous vacuoles DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTIC: nuclear chromatin lacks density; open weaved, soft, and velvetlike
Pomyelocyte
Prominent nuclei, prominent nonspecific granules, and slightly coarse nuclear chromatin. azurophilic granules (primary or non specific)
Pelger-Huet anomaly (Pseudoanomaly)
a genetic failure of the NEUTROPHILS NUCLEUS to segment properly. ALL OF THE NEUTROPHILS fail to segment properly benign anomaly with normal immunity homozygous (single lobed- peanut shaped) heterozygous (2 lobes or rarely 3)
Myeloblast
a granular
May-Hegglin Anomaly
an inherited condition that causes large Dohle like inclusion bodies PRIMARILY IN NEUTROPHILS PLATELETS ARE EFFECTED! 1/2 of pts will be asymptomatic while those with decreased platelet counts may experience bleeding.
T lymphocytes have __________ memory which is _____________
antigenic; immunity
Opsonization
antigens coated with antibodies which usually leads to phagocytosis by other cells
Necrotaxis
attraction to dead or dying cells
Promyelocyte
azurophilic (primary or non specific granules first appear) ^continue to band stage (prominence decreasing) RARELY SEEN IN MATURE SEGMENTED NEUTROPHIL
Band
band shaped nucleus
Released into peripheral circulation (few) (many) depending on infection
bands
Mature much like neutrohpils with the exception of larger dark/ purple - black granules appearing at the myelocyte stage
basophils
Play a role in acute systemic allergic reactions (heparin and histamine)
basophils
primarily a tissue cell and are normally called mast cells when fully mature in their tissue invironment
basophils
Metamyelocyte
bean shaped nucleus patches of coarse chromatin in spots the cytoplasm is a pale blue to pinkish tan with moderate specific granules DIFFERENTIATING CHARACTERISTICS: nucleus's indentation is less that half the diameter of the nucleus and condensed chromatin with no nuclei SAME FOR THE MYELOCYTE
Primary lymphoid tissues
bone marrow and thymus
The B lymphocyte comes from ___________ and migrates to the _________ where it interacts with _________ and differentiates into a _______________
bone marrow; peripheral lymphatic tissues; antigens; plasma cell
Eosinophils
can appear at the myelocytic stage and move through the maturation sequence eccentric nucleus usually bilobed (two lobes conected by a filament) the cytoplasm is a large distinctive red-orange specific granules are orange-pink DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTICS: granules are uniformly round, large and individualized; if stain is inadequate, observe granules carefully for their crystalloid nature
Basophil
can appear in the myelocytic stage and move through the maturation process chromatin is coarse clumped and there is a bilobed nuceus; its is often obscured by large dark granules present in the cytoplasm there are many large, specific secondary purple black granules that obscure the large clover leaf form nucleus DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTICS: size and color of granules obscure the nucleus
Myeloblast
can be neutrophilic, eosinophilic, or basophilic round, oval, slightly indented central nucleus chromatin is a light red-purple with a fine meshlike appearance small amount of cytoplasm moderate blue color usually without granules DIFFERENTIATING CHARACTERISTIC: nucleus has thin chromatin strands that are distributed throughout the nucleus uniformly chromatin appears smooth and velvety
Where can lymphocyte stem cells go for maturation
can remain in the bone marrow or migrate to the thymus lymph-nodes, spleen, or peyers patches in the intestine
hematopoietic growth factors _________stimulate lymphocytic stem cells in becoming various types of ____________ or ____________
cytokines; t lymphocytes; b lymphocytes
Neutropenia
decrease in neutrophils in the peripheral blood
Many Neutrophils __________in the tissues and end up_____________________ by _________________
die; phagocytized; macrophages
Alder-Reilly Anomaly
difficult to tell apart from toxic granulation NEUTROPHILS EOSINOPHILS BASOPHILS MONOCYTES LYMPHOCYTES caused by mucopolysaccharide disorder seen in pts with Hurler and Hunter Syndromes
what is primarily a tissue cell
eosinophil
Mature much like meutrophils (larger red/ orange) granules appearing at the myelocyte stage instead of the fine lt. purple granules of the neutrophil
eosinophils
These travel to sites of inflammatory reactions and parasitic infection
eosinophils
immature eosiniophils and basophils are identified as....... (generally)
eosinophils and basophils NOT eosinophilic/ basophilic myelocytes, metamyeloctes, or band (stabs)
They respectively reduce inflammation and release substances to help destroy parasties increase of about ____________in these situations
eosinophils; 15%
B Lymphocytes live _______________________
few days
Mott cell
plasma cell with vacuoles
B lymphs may differentiate into what?
plasma cells
___________________secrete immunoglobulins (antibodies) for defense against various foreign antigens (possible infections) referred to as ________________
plasma cells (mature B lymphocytes) humoral immunity
fragments of the cytoplasm
platelets, live about 9 days; maintain hemeostasis (stoppage of bleeding and capillary integrity)
shift to the left refers too.....
predominance of immature cells
time that neutrophils spend in the tissues
several days
T lymphocytes live ________________
several months or 4-10 years
Hypersegmentation
six or more lobes seen in segmented neutrophils
Dohle bodies
small lt. blue staining inclusions seen in the cytoplasm of NEUTROPHILS seen in infections, poisoning (CHEMO), burns, and Dohle-like inclusions in May-Hegglin anomaly
Myelocyte
specific secondary granules being and become more prominent with maturity
______mature in the thymus and travel to the peripheral tissues where they interact in conjunction with _____________and_______________to form specific effector cells
t lymphocytes macrophages antigens
lymphocytic stem cells are produced by
the bone marrow only
blast cells are identified by .....
the company they keep ex.great number of immature myelocytic stages + no other immature stages = myeloblast "copy cat rule"
where neutrophils carry out their major functions
tissues
vacuolated neutrophil
vacuoles in cytoplasm due to active phagocytosis caused by bacterial/ fungal infection
band
"band" shaped c or s shaped leopard spot coarseness the cytoplasm is a brown pink with many fine specific granules or secondary granules DIFFERENTIATING CHARACTERISTICS: indentation is more than half of the nuclear margin and chromatin is more clumped
humoral immunity
ANIBODIES
cellular immunity
Also called cell-mediated immunity. T lymphocytes interact with macrophages and antigens to form specific effector cells involved in hypersensitivity reactions, suppression of tumors, graft rejection, and some intra cellular orgranisms.
we are unable to specifically identify these without more advanced testing called ______________
B or T lymphocytes flow cytometry
where do hematopoietic growth factors stimulate lymphocytic stem cells?
peyer's patches in the intestine
Megakaryocytes
LARGE CELLS
YOUNG PLATELETS
LARGER and more effective at maintaining hemostasis
myelocyte
first stage where specific granules allow for differentiation between granulocytes the chromatin has an oval, indented nucleus, denser red-purple with slight granular appearance coarser, clumped appearance the cytoplasm has specific or secondary granules neutrophilic granules are dusty, fine and red-blue eosinophilic granules are large and red-orange. basophils granules are large deep blue and purple This is the last stage capable of dividing DIFFERENTIATING CHARACTERISTIC: small pink purple granules for neutrophilic myelocyte the nucleus stains a deep color; granular pattern to the chromatin ; eccentric nucleus; visible golgi apparatus seen in lighter area near nucleus
generally determine membrane surface characteristics
flow cytometry
segmented neutrophil
have two to five nuclear lobes connected by thin threadlike filaments cytoplasm is a pale lilac with blue shading and many fine secondary dustlike granules
Neutrophilia
increase in neutrophils in the peripheral blood
Metamyelocyte
indented nucleus
What are neutrophils major functions?
ingesting (phagocytosis) ; releasing lysozymes aiding in the destruction of invading microorganisms (bacteria, viruses, ect.)
Necrophagocytosis
ingestion of dying cells and cellular debris
small lymphs that attack only antibody coated cells
k-type
stages of lymphocytes
lymphoblast prolymphoblast lymphocyte
helps cells by recognizing foreign antigens (viruses, bacteria, ect.) and producing antibodies to combat them
lymphocytes
these change their appearance with various types of infections (generally viral)
lymphocytes
referred to as reactive (atypical, variant, downey) lymphocytes
lymphocytes that change their appearance with various types of infections
rarely seen in blood and are given various names depending on the specific tissue in which they are found
macrophages
once monocytes are in the tissues they mature into ________________ and spend _________________ carrying out their functions before they die
macrophages; several months
Stages of a megakaryocyte
megakaryoblast, promegakaryocyte, megakaryocyte, then platelets -which are fragments of cytoplasm
stages of monocyte
monoblast promonocyte monocyte
nucleus has a fine lacy chromatin/parachromatin pettern and is often horseshoe/ kidney shaped or clefted/ folded (noneucleoli) The cytoplasm is blue-grey with a fine granulation often reffered to as a ground glass appearance
monocytes
often pseudopods and vacuoles will be present
monocytes
produced in the bones marrow and still considered immature when released into the paripheral blood
monocytes
Atypical Platelets
most often seen in myleoproliferative disorders
Neutrophil stages of development
myeloblast promyelocyte myelocyte metamyelocyte band segmented neutrophil
Where do the 3 specific (secondary) granules first appear?
myelocyte stage
type of lymphocyte formerly called null cells and appear as large granular lymphs
natural killer (NK)
these are known to destroy targeted cells through a cytoxic mechanism that lyse cells rather than phagocytic route
natural killer (NK) K-type
These cells do not have the common cell surface markers of the B&T lymphocytes
natural killer (NK) and k-type
Produced in the bone marrow and mature there as well going through the various stages before they are released into the peripheral circulation
neutrophilic granulocytes (released into peripheral circulation) mature segmented neutrophils
what 3 cell types are distinguished by 3 types of specific (secondary) granules
neutrophils eosinophils and basophils
Barr Body
nuclear chromatin projection with a drumstick shape with no clinical significance
smudge cell
nucleus without cytoplasm LYMPHOCYTES MOSTLY OR VERY RARELY A NEUTROPHIL
Promyelocyte
oval, round, or eccentric flattened nucleus chromatin is a light red-purple of medium density may see one to three prominent nuclei moderate blue cytoplasm difficult to observe because of the blue-red azurophilic granules are scattered everywhere DIFFERENTIATING CHARACTERISTIC: Cell is usually larger than a blast with a large prominent nuclei nuclear chromatin is slightly coarse