Hematopoiesis And Blood Cell Morphology Flashcards

1
Q

What is hematopoiesis?

A

Process by which new blood cells are formed

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2
Q

Where are the sites of hematopoiesis ?

A

3rd week of gestation= yolk sac
Weeks later= AGM region
2-3 months through 6-7 months= liver
7 months through childhood,adult life= bone marrow

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3
Q

What is the difference in hematopoiesis in infancy,childhood and in puberty and adulthood?

A

In infancy and childhood all marrow is hematopoietic

In puberty and adulthood hematopoiesis is restricted to central skeleton and proximal ends of long bones

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4
Q

What is the normal cellularity?

A

100-age +/- 20%

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5
Q

What are the cells of hematopoiesis ?

A

Hematopoietic stem cells(HSC)- pluripotent, unrecognizable, express CD34
Multilineage progenitor cells- multipotent, unrecognizable, express CD34
Progenitor cells- unrecognizable, express CD34 and HLA-DR, irreversibly committed to single lineage
Blast cells- first recognizable, variable expression of CD34
Everything after blasts- recognizable, do not express CD34

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6
Q

What are the cells of granulopoiesis?

A
Myeloblast- non granular cytoplasm 
Promyelocyte- larger than blasts, granules present
Myelocyte- specific granules evident
Metamyelocyte- rarely seen 
Band cells-horse shoe shape
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7
Q

Under what circumstances are monoblasts and promonocytes increased?

A

In myeloid neoplasms

Not seen in appreciable numbers in bone marrow under normal conditions

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8
Q

What is the contraindication to bone marrow examination ?

A

Failure to meet appropriate indication criteria is the only major contraindication

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9
Q

Where is the site for bone marrow examination?

A

Posterior iliac crest

If not available anterior iliac crest

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10
Q

What is the uses of bone marrow biopsy?

A

Determine architectural relationships

Normal cellularity

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11
Q

What are the uses of bone marrow aspirate?

A

Cell counts
Cytologic evaluation of individual cells
Special studies:flow cytometry, cytochemistry

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12
Q

What are the abnormalities of erythrocytes based on size?

A

Microcytic hypochromic<7microns and pale(<80 fl)- seen in iron deficiency, anemia of chronic disease
Macrocytic cells >8.5 microns (100 fl)- seen in B12 or folate deficiency

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13
Q

What are the abnormalities of erythrocytes based on shape?

A

Spherocytes- lost of biconcave shape
Elliptocytosis/Ovalocytosis
Target cells-large floppy cells with redundant cytoplasmic membrane
Acanthocytes-amoeboid cells with unevenly distributed spicules
Echinocytes- evenly distributed spicules
Stomatocytes- mouth cells associated with alcoholic liver disease
Schistocytes- RBC fragments
Sickle cells -collapsed red cells

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14
Q

What are the morphologic features of hemoglobin C disease?

A

Irregularly contracted cells
Target cells
Hemoglobin C crystals
Spherocytes

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15
Q

What are the characteristics of Bite cell?

A

Appearance of bite taken out of cell
Heinz bodies seen on methylene blue stain
Associated with G6PDH deficiency

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16
Q

What are the characteristics of teardrop cells?

A

Due to mechanical distortion of cell

Result of marrow fibrosis

17
Q

What is polychromasia?

A

Indicates reticulocytosis, immature RBCs that have been prematurely released from bone marrow

18
Q

What are the erythrocytes inclusions?

A

Howell-Jolly Bodies- small nuclear remnant seen in post splenectomy, normal finding in neonates
Pappenheimer Bodies- iron containing mitochondrial remnants, seen in sideroblastic anemias
Basophilic stippling-RNA, aggregates of ribosomes, seen in lead intoxication

19
Q

What is Rouleaux?

A

Stacking of 4 or more RBCs in linear fashion like stack of coins