Chapter 5 Flashcards
How do leukocyte counts change in young animals as they age?
Normal at birth
By 3-4 months neutrophil/lymphocyte counts increase
Normal by 5-6 months
How to the marginated and circulating pools of neutrophils compare in dogs and cats?
D - 50/50
C - 75/25 M/C
What is the circulating half life of neutrophils?
6-12h
What causes neutrophil toxic change?
Severe inflammatory disease - bacterial infections/IMHA
Some drugs/toxins
Storage
What are the features of toxic change?
Cytoplasmic basophilia
Cytoplasmic vacuolation
Dohle bodies
Toxic granulation
Nuclear swelling
Giant neutrophils
Doughnut nuclei
In what species are Dohle bodies a normal finding?
Cats
List 2 inherited forms on neutropenia and the breed affected
Trapped neutrophil syndrome
Cyclic haemopoiesis
Border collies
List 3 inherited neutrophil abnormalities and the affected breed
LAD - Irish Setters
Chediak-Higashi - Persians
Pelger Huet - DSH and dogs
What infectious diseases can be seen within neutrophils?
Ehrlichia
Anaplasma
Histoplasma
Hepatozoon
Leishmania
What is the function of basophils?
Allergy/parasites
Where does most lymphopoeisis occur?
Secondary lymphoid tissue - LN, tonsils, Peyer’s patches, spleen
How are B/T lymphocytes differentiated on flow cytometry?
B - CD79a
T - CD3
Which are the only WBCs that circulate between tissues and blood?
Lymphocytes
What are causes of lymphocytosis?
Physiological - fear/stress
Youth
Recent vaccination
Immune stimulation
IMHA (C)
Hyperthyroidism
Hypoadrenocorticism
Lymphoma
ALL, CLL
(Thymoma)
What biochemical changes are commonly seen in ALL (artifactual and pathological)?
^ K+
v glucose
^Ca++/gammaglobulins