27-09-21 - White Blood Cells - Normal and Malignant Flashcards

1
Q

What is chemotaxis?

A
  • Chemotaxis is the movement of a cell/organism in a direction that correlates to a gradient of increasing or decreasing concentration of a particular substance
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2
Q

What are the 5 common types of white blood cell?

How can they be identified on a microscope?

A
  • Granulocytes – Neutrophils - multilobed nucleus
  • Granulocytes – eosinophils - bilobed nucleus (may appear orange and pink)
  • Granulocytes – basophils - corse purple granules with bilobed nucleus
  • Lymphocytes - dark nucleus with thin rim of cytoplasm
  • Monocytes - nuclei with indentation to one side
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3
Q

Granulocyte neutrophils:

  • What % of WBC in blood are these?
  • What is their lifespan?
  • What causes them to rise?
  • What kind of immunity are they part of?
  • What type of cells are neutrophils?
  • What do they do with foreign bodies?
A
  • Most common WBC type – make 50-70% of WBC count in blood.
  • Short lifespan – 8-10 hours
  • Neutrophils rise as an acute response to bacterial infection, inflammation and malignancy (e.g bacteria wall antigens) – this is chemotaxis
  • Part of innate immune response.
  • Neutrophils are phagocytic cells
  • Foreign bodies (e.g bacteria) ingested and killed by enzymes in granules ex lysozyme and peroxidase.
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4
Q

Granulocytes – eosinophils

  • What % of WBC in blood are these?
  • What is their lifespan?
  • What is their growth promoted by?
  • What causes them to rise?
  • How do they kill foreign bodies?
  • What kind of immunity are they part of?
  • What stains the granules?
A
  • Make up 1-6% of total WBC count in blood.
  • Life span in blood is 4-5 hours (longer in tissues).
  • Growth promoted by interleukin 5.
  • Chemokines (signalling proteins) attract them to specific tissues.
  • Their granules contain Major Basic Protein and reactive O2 species, which are toxic to what the eosinophils are trying to kill (parasites)
  • Part of innate immunity.
  • Eosin stains granules orange and pink.
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5
Q

Eosinophils:

  • What is their marked rise in numbers?
  • Where are they most commonly seen?
  • What causes their numbers to rise and fall?
A
  • Marked rise in numbers in blood from 0.4 – 2-6 x 10^9/l
  • Commonly seen in atopy – problem with your immune system that makes you more likely to develop allergic diseases e.g., eczema, asthma and hay fever
  • Can also be found in Hodgkin’s disease, CML and other malignancy, adverse drug reactions, and helminth infection (intestinal worm)
  • The blood levels of eosinophils often correlate with clinical activity e.g., during hay fever season.
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6
Q

Granulocytes – Basophils:

  • What % of WBC in blood are these?
  • What is their lifespan?
  • What do their granules consist of?
  • What 3 roles do they play?
  • What kind of immunity are they part of?
A
  • Make up less than 1% of WBC count in blood.
  • Lifespan of 1-2 days
  • Dark basophilic granules contain histamine, leukotrienes, proteases and heparin
  • Acts as a cell surface receptor for IgE – binding produces degranulation following chemotaxis.
  • Role in phagocytosis
  • Role in hypersensitivity (allergic) reactions
  • Part of the innate immunity
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7
Q

What is the specific term given to an allergic reaction?

What can it cause?

A
  • Anaphylaxis – type 1 allergic reaction
  • Can results in:
  • Swelling of lips, tongue and or throat
  • Skin – hives, itching, flushing
  • Light-headedness, loss of consciousness, confusion, headache
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8
Q

Lymphocytes:

  • What % of WBC in blood are these?
  • What is their lifespan?
  • How are they formed?
  • What are the 2 types and where are they found?
  • What are they both responsible for?
  • What causes them to rise?
  • What can they indicate?
  • What kind of immunity are they part of?
A
  • Make up 20-40% of total WBC count in blood.
  • Lifespan of 1 week to a few months
  • Differentiate early from other marrow derived cells
  • Divide into T cells (Thymus – lymphoid gland in chest) and B cells (Bone marrow or bursa)
  • Rise in response to viral infections, and Chronic Lymphocytic Leukaemia
  • T and B cell malignancies with circulating cells = leukaemia
  • Part of the adaptive immunity
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9
Q

Macrophages/Monocytes:

  • What % of WBC in blood are these?
  • What is the difference between the 2?
  • What is their lifespan?
  • What do they contain?
  • What are their 2 roles?
  • What kind of immunity are they part of?
A
  • Make up 5-10% of WBC count in blood.
  • Macrophages are monocytes that have migrates to any tissue in the body.
  • Monocytes have a lifespan of a few days; macrophages have a lifespan of months to years.
  • They have a vacuole containing hydrolases and myeloperoxidase
  • They act as antigen presenting cells by ingesting material (phagocytosis) and presenting the peptides to T cells so antibodies can be made.
  • Their role is to kill mycobacteria’s (e.g. TB), fungi and intracellular organisms e.g. listeria.
  • Part of the innate immunity.
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10
Q

What is innate and active immunity? What immunity are each type of WBC part of?

A
  • Innate immunity – the organism is born with it (non-specific)
  • Adaptive immunity – organism acquires this through disease exposure (specific)
  • Innate immunity
  • Neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils, monocytes
  • Adaptive
  • T and B lymphocytes
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11
Q

What is a WBC differential?

What are 4 reasons why is it useful in clinical practise?

A
  • A WBC differential determines the % of each type of WBC in the blood.
  • A WBC differential and blood film can be useful clues for:
  • Evidence of different types of infection and response to treatment
  • Allergic response
  • Leukaemia (malignant T and B cells in circulating blood is leukaemia)
  • Marrow infiltration
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12
Q

Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia (CML):

  • What age group does it occur?
  • What are symptoms?
  • What are signs of it?
  • How does it develop?
  • What causes most cases?
A
  • Occurs in all age groups.
  • Symptoms of anaemia (tired, no energy), large spleen, bone pain
  • Signs are anaemia, high WBC and platelet count (immature cells)
  • Typically, a chronic phase and then an accelerated acute phase
  • 95% of cases have an identical cytogenetic and molecular mutation.
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13
Q

What is the cytogenetic mutation associated with Chronic myeloid leukaemia?

How does this cause CML?

How is this treated?

How is the effect monitored?

A
  • Reciprocal translocation between chromosome 9 and 22.
  • Each chromosome swaps a chunk.
  • This results in the formation of a Philadelphia chromosome on chromosome 22
  • This causes the tyrosine kinase gene to be activated which causes cell proliferation.
  • The drug imatinib is used to treat CML by acting as a tyrosine kinase inhibitor
  • Effect of drug monitored by PCR on blood test.
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14
Q

Acute Myeloid Leukaemia (AML):

  • What age group does it occur?
  • What does it present with?
  • What are symptoms?
A
  • More common with increasing age
  • Presents with symptoms of marrow failure:
  • Anaemia
  • Bleeding – purpura (small blood vessels bursting), bruises
  • Infections – sepsis (life-threatening reaction to infection), pneumonia
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15
Q

How is Acute Myeloid Leukaemia treated?

What are the problems when treating AML?

A
  • Unlike CML, there are diverse cytogenetic changes, so there is no specific target for chemotherapy for AML
  • Chemotherapy produces marrow aplasia, where the red marrow disappears and ceases to create new blood cells.
  • It is hope that the marrow stem cells will regenerate bone marrow faster than the chemotherapy destroys it
  • Under 60s patients can undergo bone marrow transplants.
  • During chemo, patients can get infections, bleeds, psychological difficulties from long hospital stays, and suffer pain from venous access and frequent marrow tests to check response.
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16
Q

Identify all the white blood cells on a blood film

A