8/11- Leukocytes: Benign Leukocyte Disorders Flashcards
What are 3 causes of eosinophilia?
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What are 3 causes of benign neutrophilic leukocytosis?
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Which of the following cells would be considered granulocytes: A. Neutrophils B. Lymphocyte C. Eosinophil D. Basophil E. Monocyte
A, C, D
Which of the following neutrophil functions is effective in chronic granulomatous disease?
A. Chemotaxis
B. Migration
C. Phagocytosis
D. Intracellular killing
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Name four common causes of neutropenia
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Name three characteristics of neutrophilic leukemoid reaction
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The leukocytosis seen in peripheral blood of pts with infectious mononucleosis are composed largely of which of the following:
A. B cells
B. T cells
C. Monocytes
D. Neutrophils
E. Eosinophils
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Where do granulocytes originate? Mature?
Granulocytes (BEN) grow up and mature in the bone marrow
What is this?
Neutrophil
Morphologic characteristics of neutrophils?
- Size
- Nucleus
- Chromatin
- Nucleoli
- Cytoplasm
- 10-15 um
- Segmented nucleus with 2-5 lobes (connected by filaments)
- Clumped chromatin
- No nucleoli
- Pale pink cytoplasm with many specific (pink to lilac) granules
What kind of granules do neutrophils contain?
Contain primary (general to granulocytes) and secondary (specific) granules
When do primary granules form? What do they contain?
Primary granules form at promyelocyte stage
Contain:
- Myeloperoxidase
- Lysozyme
- Elastase
When do secondary (specific) granules form? What do they contain?
Myelocyte and metamyelocyte stages
Contain:
- Lactoferrin
- Lysozyme
- Collagenase
What are the main roles of neutrophils?
- Important roles in response to infection and acute inflammation
Specific jobs:
- Chemotaxis
- Phagocytosis
- Killing of microorganisms
What is this?
Eosinophil
Morphologic characteristics of eosinophils?
- Size
- Nucleus
- Chromatin
- Nucleoli
- Cytoplasm
- 10-15 um
- Segmented nucleus with 2-3 lobes (connected by a thin filament)
- Dense and compact chromatin
- No nucleoli
- Cytoplasm filled by uniform, coarse spherical orange-red refractile granules
What kind of granules do eosinophils contain?
Also have 2 types of granules (electron dense, crystalloid containing)
Both contain:
- Peroxidase
- Major basic protein
- Histamine
- Collagenase
- Acid phosphatase
Functions of eosinophils?
Shared functions with neutrophils:
- Chemotaxis
- Phagocytosis
- Killing of microorganisms
Special abilities:
- Killer (effector) cells in antibody-dependent damage to parasites
- Allergic responses to foreign bodies (like catheters)
What is this?
Basophil
Morphologic characteristics of basophils?
- Size
- Nucleus
- Chromatin
- Nucleoli
- Cytoplasm
- 10-15 um
- Segmented nucleus, often obscured by granules
- Clumped chromatin
- No nucleoli
- Cytoplasm is filled with coarse, dense, dark granules
What granules do basophils contain?
- Histamine
- Heparin
Functions of basophils?
Along with mast cells, basophils play important roles in immediate-type hypersensitivity reactions
Morphologic characteristics of monocytes?
- Size
- Nucleus
- Chromatin
- Nucleoli
- Cytoplasm
- 12-20 um (larger than granulocytes)
- Round to oval, indented nucleus
- Chromatin is slightly clumped, rope-like
- No nucleoli
- Cytoplasm is gray-blue with scattered vacuoles
Where do monocytes grow up and mature?
- Grow up in bone marrow
- Circulate in blood and mature into macrophages/histiocytes in the tissues
What is this?
Monocyte
What enzymes are contained within monocytes?
- Collagenase
- Elastase
- Coagulation system proteins
- Hydrolytic enzymes
Roles of monocytes?
- Phagocytose particulate material and kill microorganisms (like neutrophils)
Unique functions:
- Chronic inflammatory response
- Present antigen to T cells
- Destroy old RBCs in the bone marrow, spleen, and liver
- Produce cytokines important in hematopoiesis
(Growth factors such as G-CSF, M-CSF)
What is this?
Lymphocyte
What are the main types of lymphocytes?
- B cells
- T cells
- NK cells
Where do lymphocytes originate/mature?
- Originate in bone marrow
- B cells mature in bone marrow
- T cells mature in thymus
Morphologic characteristics of lymphocytes?
- Size
- Nucleus
- Chromatin
- Nucleoli
- Cytoplasm
- 7-15 um (roughly same size as RBC)
- Round, oval, occ notched nucleus
- Diffusely dense/coarse chromatin
- Not visible nucleoli
- Cytoplasm is scant to moderate, pale to dark (reactive lymphocytes have more cytoplasm)