10-10 Blood and hematopoiesis

BLOOD CELLS

LYMPHOCYTES

The upper image shows a nucleated cell whose size is similar to that of a red blood cell. It is a leukocyte.
Its nucleus has dense chromatin (is well stained), and spherical. It is not subdivided into lobes, therefore it is not a polymorphonuclear leukocyte, which rules out the diagnosis of a neutrophil, eosinophil, and basophil.

There is very little cytoplasm around the nucleus – only a thin layer. It consists of a light blue rim.
In addition, no specific granules are observed in the cytoplasm – there are no neutrophilic, eosinophilic, or basophilic granules. This confirms that it is not a granulocyte leukocyte, but an agranulocyte.

Agranulocytes are either lymphocytes or monocytes.

A small agranulocyte with very little cytoplasm can only be a a lymphocyte. Monocytes are much larger cells with a lot of cytoplasm.

The cell in the lower figure: same featutes, same diagnosis.

Note that the cytoplasm is not bluish like in the upper figure. Probably a staining defect as pointed out at the beginning of this chapter.

Blood smear. Staining: Leishman. Large magnification.

Blood smear. Staining: Leishman. Large magnification.

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