White Cells Flashcards

1
Q

what are the three different types of granulocytes?

A
  • basophil
  • neutrophil
  • eosinophil
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2
Q

where do granulocytes originate from

A

HSC → myeloid precursor → myeloblast → granulocytes

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3
Q

why do granulocytes have granules?

A

contain agents/proteins essential for their microbial function

e. g.
- neutrophils - enzymes to kill bacteria
- eosinophils - toxins to defend agains parasitic infections
- basophils - histamines + heparin (naturally occurring anticoagulant) + proteolytic enzymes (tissue breakdown)

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4
Q

what is the growth factor which encourage production/controls of granulocytes?

A

G-CSF (granulocyte colony-stimulating factor)

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5
Q

what is the growth factor which encourage/controls production of macrophages?

A

M-CSF

-causes neutrophil then macrophage production

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6
Q

what is the growth factor which encourage production/controls of granulocyte + macrophages?

A

GM-CSF

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7
Q

when would these growth factors be produced in increase amounts?

A

e. g.
- inflammation
- infection

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8
Q

how does a granulocyte mature?

A

myeloblast → divides into two myelocytes → nucleus becomes band/indented → neutrophil

overall: size gets smaller + development of granules

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9
Q

what dye do basophils take up?

A

basic (hence name)

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10
Q

what dye do eosinophils take up?

A

eosin

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11
Q

what dye do neutrophil take up?

A

basic + acidic dye in basic way

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12
Q

what is the main function of the neutrophil?

A

-defence agains infection through phagocytosis (mainly in tissues)

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13
Q

how do neutrophils work physiologically?

A

1) chemotaxis (cytokine attracts neutrophils)
2) adhesion + margination (to endothelium)
3) rolling along endothelium
4) diapedesis as they come out through the capillary wall
5) migration + phagocytosis of bacteria = kill bacteria or break down tissue

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14
Q

what is the main function of eosinophils?

A

defence against parasitic infections

spend even less time in the circulation than neutrophils

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15
Q

what is the main function of basophils?

A

involved in variety of immune and inflammatory responses

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16
Q

where do monocytes originate from?

A

HSC → myeloid stem cell → monoblast (myeloblast) → monocyte

17
Q

what is the main function of monocytes?

A

-ingesting bacteria and present the broken down bacteria antigen on surface to lymphoid cells which will respond to the antigenic stimulus

18
Q

what happens when they migrate into tissues?

A

-develop into macrophages

19
Q

what are the key features of macrophages?

A
  • largest of the granulocytes
  • nuclei of erythroblasts inside
  • bacteria inside macrophages
20
Q

what are the functions of macrophages?

A
  • scaveging functions

- store + release iron when they ingest old RBCs (ferritin + hemosiderin - storage forms of iron)

21
Q

what is the origin of lymphocytes?

A

HSC → lymphoid stem cells → NK cells / small lymphocytes → B + T cells

22
Q

what cells can b-lymphocytes mature into?

A

plasma cells (bigger than small lymphocytes, large Golgi zone where antibodies produced) → antibodies

23
Q

which immunity are t-lymphocytes involved?

A

cell-mediated immunity

24
Q

which immunity are NK cells involved?

A

innate → kill tumour cells + virus infected cells

25
Q

What are the 2 main types of abnormalities that can occur in white cells?

A

-changes can be numerical, morphological or both

  1. leucocytosis (too many white cells e.g. neutrophilia)
  2. leucopenia (reduction in wbcs e.g. neutropenia)
26
Q

Reasons for neutrophilia (too many neutrophils)?

A

1) infection
2) inflammation
3) infarction/tissue damage
4) myeloidproliferatuve neoplasm
5) pregnancy
6) exercise
7) after corticosteroids

neutrophilia + left shift connected non-segmented nucleuses

27
Q

Reasons for neutropenia (too few neutrophils)?

A

1) chemotherapy + radiotherapy (as targets bone marrow)
2) autoimmune disorders
3) severe bacterial infections (strong pull so all neutrophils leaving bloodstream into tissues and BM can’t keep up)
4) viral infections
5) drugs

28
Q

What happens to patients with very low neutrophil counts (< 0.5 × 109/l)?

A

high risk of serious infection e.g. sepsis

29
Q

What is the name of a morphological abnormality a neutrophil could have?

A

neutrophil hypersegmentation

when there is an incr. in average number of neutrophil lobes

30
Q

Reasons for Neutrophil hypersegmentation?

A

due to b12, folate deficiency

31
Q

Reasons for Lymphocytosis (too many lymphocytes)?

A

1) viral infection
2) leukaemia
3) sometimes bacterial infections e.g. pertussis

32
Q

Definition of lymphomenia and what type of cells it mainly consists of?

A

total lymphocyte count as less than 1x10^9/l

33
Q

Reasons for Lymphopenia (too few lymphocytes)?

A

1) HIV
2) chemotherapy
3) radiotherapy
4) corticosteroids
5) severe infection

34
Q

Reasons for Monocytosis (too many monocytes)?

A

1) infection (chronic)
2) chronic inflammation
3) some leukaemia

35
Q

Reasons for Eosinophilia (too many eosinophils)?

A

1) allergy e.g. asthma
2) parasitic infection
3) leukaemia

36
Q

Reasons for Basophilia (too many basophils)?

A

uncommon

1) leukaemia or related conditions

37
Q

Summary: Transient leucocytosis is frequently associated with?

A

associated with infection

bacterial: neutrophilia / monocytosis
viral: lymphocytosis
parasitic: eosinophilia

38
Q

Summary: Persistent leucocytosis may be caused by?

A

leukaemia