week 3 haematology Flashcards

1
Q

ideal place to take a bone marrow sample in an adult

A

posterior iliac crest

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2
Q

most appropriate technique to assign cell lineage

A

immunophenotyping

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3
Q

simple function of platelets

A

primary haemostasis

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4
Q

megakaryocytes

A

platelet precursor
polypoid

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5
Q

reticulocytes

A

immediate red cell precursor

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6
Q

myelocytes

A

nucleated precursor between neutrophils

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7
Q

name the developmental events in haemopoiesis

A

self renewal
proliferation
differentiation
maturation
apoptosis

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8
Q

first site of erythroid activity in fetus

A

yolk sac
- stops by week 10

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9
Q

bone marrow vasculature

A

venous sinuses:
- nutrient artery and periosteal network
- arterioles drain into sinuses- wide venous vessels, which open into larger central sinuses

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10
Q

how are mature cells released from the marrow

A

pass through fenestrations in endothelial cells to enter circulation
- associated with sinusoidal dilatation and increased blood flow

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11
Q

red marrow

A

haemopoietically active

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12
Q

yellow marrow

A

fatty and inactive

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13
Q

myeloid:erythroid ratio

A

relationship of neutrophils and precursors to proportion of nucleated red cells precursors

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14
Q

what regulates haemopoiesis

A

intrinsic properties of cells
signals from immediate surroundings and the periphery
specific anatomical area for optimal developmental signals

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15
Q

how do we assess haemopoiesis for non-lympoid mature cells

A

blood count, cell indices, morphology
less common- bone marrow examination

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16
Q

how to assess haemopoiesis- rare populations of cells

A

immunophenotyping
clonogenic assays
animal models

17
Q

what is immunophenotyping

A

identify patterns of protein (antigen) expression unique to a cell lineage
use antibodies (in combination) specific to different