Neutrophil and Eos 2 Flashcards

1
Q

How long does it take for neutrophils to mature in bone marrow?

A

7-10 days

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2
Q

What is the pathogenesis of leukocyte adhesion deficiency?

A

Defect in an integrin receptor that causes a defect in neutrophil adhesion, chemotaxis, and phagocytosis. Meaning neutrophils cannot leave the vasculature to migrate into tissue

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3
Q

Clinical manifestations of leukocyte adhesion deficiency

A

High WBC, high neutrophil, recurrent skin infections (no abscesses), gingivitis. Many die before age 2

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4
Q

Mutation seen in severe congenital neutropenia

A

ELANE

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5
Q

What is Kostmann’s syndrome? What is the mutation?

A

Autosomal recessive severe congenital neutropenia. Mutation in HAX1

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6
Q

What mutation is seen in almost 100% of cyclic neutropenia?

A

ELANE

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7
Q

how long are the cycles of cyclic neutropenia?

A

15-35 days

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8
Q

what does a bone marrow typically show in cyclic neutropenia?

A

Myelocyte arrest

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9
Q

Clinical triad of Felty syndrome

A

Autoimmune neutropenia
Splenomegaly
RA

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10
Q

What are the clinical manifestations of WHIM syndrome?

A

Warts (HPV)
Hypogammaglobulinemia
Immunodeficiency
Myelokathexis (retention and increased apoptosis of mature neutrophils in bone marrow causing peripheral neutropenia)

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11
Q

What is the mutation and inheritance in WHIM syndrome?

A

AD mutation in CXCR4 gene, which prevents release of neutrophils and lymphocytes to the bloodstream

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12
Q

Treatment for WHIM syndrome

A

Plerixafor to mobilize stem cells and reduce infection
Can try IVIG too

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13
Q

Patient with a history of discoid lupus, recurrent infections as a kid, has chronic diarrhea and dyspnea from restrictive lung disease. What is the likely diagnosis? What test to order to make the diagnosis?

A

Chronic Granulomatous Disease
Nitroblue tetrazolium test or Dihidrorhodamine 123

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14
Q

What treatment has been proven to reduce the rate of infection in chronic granulomatous disease?

A

Interferon gamma

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15
Q

What is the defect in Chediak Higashi syndrome?

A

LYST gene defect causing generalized defect in granule morphogenesis

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16
Q

Patient with oculocutaneous albinism, recurrent bacterial infections, peripheral neuropathy. Ultimately has an acute worsening and develops hepatosplenomegaly, pancytopenia, and potential signs of HLH. Diagnosis?

A

Chediak Higashi Syndrome

17
Q

What malignancy is more commonly associated with autoimmune neutropenia?

A

LGL

18
Q

In treating someone with RA-associated autoimmune neutropenia, what is a major consideration you need to have for treatment?

A

G-CSF can cause a flare of joint disease in RA

19
Q

What are three cytokines that regulate eosinophil production and function?

A

IL-5
IL-3
GM-CSF

20
Q

Diagnostic criteria for hypereosinophilic syndrome (6)

A

Persistent eosinophilia >1.5 and >10% eosinophils
Organ damage attributable to eos
No evidence of reactive, neoplastic, or autoimmune condition
Exclusion of LV-HES
Bone marrow generally normal with increased eos
No molecular genetic abnormality

21
Q

What is lymphocyte-variant hypereosinophilia?

A

rare abnormal T-cell population by flow cytometry and clonal T-cell receptor arrangement that causes skin changes, adenopathy, and rheymatologic problems.

22
Q

Patient with absolute eosinophil count above 1.5, 12% blasts in periphery, no fusion or other cytogenetic abnormalities. They have fever, fatigue, cough, pruritus. Diagnosis?

A

Chronic Eosinophilic Leukemia

23
Q

What is the mechanism of action of mepolizumab?

A

Anti IL-5 therapy

24
Q

What is the indication for mepolizumab?

A

Used for patients with >2 HES flares/year and AEC >1000

25
Q

What are risk factors for poor outcomes in patients with HES?

A

Age >60
Hemoglobin <10
Cardiac involvement
Hepatosplenomegaly
Presence of mutations