Title: Hematology 425 Qualitative Alterations of Leukocytes
1Hematology 425 Qualitative Alterations of
Leukocytes
- Russ Morrison
- November 27, 2006
2Leukocyte Alterations - Qualitative
- Changes in WBCs may be inherited or acquired
- Benign changes do not correlate with dysplasia or
malignancy - Inherited changes may be asymptomatic or life
threatening - Acquired changes are seen in response to
circumstances and are interpreted as indicators
of disease states
3Leukocyte Alterations - Qualitative
- Leukocyte alterations can be distinguished by
many methods - Mode of transmission (inherited or acquired)
- Frequency (common or rare)
- Location (nuclear or cytoplasmic)
- Microscopic manifestation (morphologic or
nonmorphologic)
4Nuclear/Morphologic Alterations of Granulocytes
- Pelger-Huet Anomaly
- Common (1/6000) inherited nuclear aberration
- Hyposegmentation of the nucleus
- Clinically insignificant, no loss of cellular
function - Inherited as an autosomal dominant
5Nuclear/Morphologic Alterations of Granulocytes
- Identified by
- 1. Nuclei that are round, oval or bilobed with
pinched appearance - Clumping of chromatin
- Uniformity of appearance of most cells
- Cells sometimes confused with bands or metas
- Must be differentiated from pseudo-Pelger-Huet
cells
6Nuclear/Morphologic Alterations of Granulocytes
- Pseudo-Pelger-Huet cells are found in high stress
situations (burns, drug reactions, infections,
myelodysplastic syndromes, CGL and acute
leukemias - If these cells are seen, report as mature cells
resembling those of Pelger-Huet anomaly - Genetic studies will verify the status
7Pelger-Huet Anomaly
8Hereditary Hypersegmentation of Granulocytes
- Hereditary hypersegmentation of granulocyte
nuclei is clinically insignificant - Autosomal diminant inheritance
- Must be distinguished from hypersegmentation seen
in megaloblastic anemias (B12, folate deficiency)
and from acquired hypersegmentation (twinning
deformity)
9Hereditary Hypersegmentation of Granulocytes
- Twinning is a term that describes a nucleus that
has axial symmetry - Twinning is an acquired anomaly and is clinically
significant in stress situations, malignancies
and oncologic treatments - Figure 26-4 shows hypersegmentation with
increases in extrusions of nuclear material - Extrusions are found in persons with trisomy some
chromosomes, including X
10Hypersegmented Neutrophil
11Cytoplasmic Alterations of Granulocytes,
Alder-Reilly Anomaly
- Alder-Reilly anomaly results from a recessive
disorder that causes deposition of
mucopolysaccharides (lipids) in the cytoplasm of
most cells - The lipid deposits stain purple and are called
Alder-Reilly bodies - Commonly seen in patients with Hurlers and
Hunters syndromes
12(No Transcript)
13Cytoplasmic Alterations of Granulocytes,
Chediak-Higashi Syndrome
- Chediak-Higashi syndrome demonstrates large
peroxidase-positive lysosomes in most cells of
the body - It is a rare autosomal recessive syndrome
- Large, fused granules also occurs in melanosomes
of the sking and may lead to albinism - C-H syndrome results in an increased rate of
precursor cell death, causing neutropenia and
thrombocytopenia
14Cytoplasmic Alterations of Granulocytes,
Chediak-Higashi Syndrome
- C-H syndrome results in increased susceptibility
to infections and bleeding problems - It progresses through peripheral neuropathy,
pancytopenia, systemic infections,
hepatosplemomegaly and lymphadenopathy to death
15C-H Syndrome, cytoplasmic inclusions
16Cytoplasmic Alterations of Granulocytes,
May-Hegglin Anomaly
- May-Hegglin anomaly is characterized by the
presence of large Dohle body-like formations in
all cells - It is a rare autosomal dominant condition
- Patients are at risk for infections and bleeding
- Bleeding is due to thrombocytopenia and abnormal
platelet function with short life span - Most patients with M-H anomaly are asymptomatic,
but bleeding episodes have been reported
17May-Hegglin Anomaly
18Cytoplasmic Alterations - Acquired
- In addition to the genetic alterations already
discussed, a number of acquired cytoplasmic
changes have been described - Toxic granulation demonstrates dominant primary
granules as a result of stress - The stress response is usually the result of
infection or inflammation - Cellular stimulation of young neutrophils causes
membrane alteration which causes granules to
appear larger and darker than normal in common
staining methods
19Toxic Granulation
- Toxic granulation is felt to be clinically
significant as it appears to reflect a poorer
prognosis when identified - It is not significant in patients being treated
with granulocyte monocyte colony-stimulating
factor (GM-CSF) - May look like an artifact produced with poor
staining, but TG will be uniform throughout all
WBCs, while real TG is unevely spread throughout
the cytoplasm of certain cells
20Toxic Granulation
21Dohle Bodies
- Dohle bodies develop in the cytoplasm of
granulocytes of patients with infections - Dohle bodies are composed of parallel rows of
ribosomal RNA - When stained, they are gray to light blue
- Mechanism of development is unknown, but
associated with burns, infections, surgery,
pregnancy and use of GM-CSF
22Dohle Bodies
23Vacuolization
- Phagocytic vacuoles are found in neutrophils as a
result of various situations - Autophagocytosis (phagocytosis of self) is seen
with prolonged drug exposure (antibiotics) and
toxins (alcohol and radiation) - Ingestion of bacteria or fungi
- Jordan anomaly is a familial disorder with
vacuoles filled with lipids, in the cytoplasm of
granulocytes, lymphocytes and monocytes
24Necrobiosis
- Large numbers of dead granulocytes in the PBS
indicate severe strain in granulocyte development
pools - Figure 26-8 shows a necrobiotic cell, typical of
dead or dying white blood cells - Box 26-2 summarizes the acquired granulocyte
anomalies
25Cytoplasmic Alterations of Granulocytes -
nonmorphologic
- Chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) of childhood
is a group of genetic disorders where the
intracellular kill mechanism of the granulocyte
is defective - The two most common forms of CGD are sex linked
and autosomal recessive - Victims have chronic pyogenic infections of all
systems - Secondary anemia of chronic disease is often
present
26Miscellaneous Deficiencies
- Other manifestations of neutrophilic dysfunction
- Congenital C3 deficiency
- Disorders of neutrophilic movement
- Myeloperoxidase deficiency
- WHO cluster of poor leukocyte adherence syndromes
27Cytoplasmic changes of Monocyte/Macrophage
- Cells of the monocyte/macrophage system are quite
rich in lysosomes that contain hydrolytic enzymes - These enzymes normally break down products of
cellular metabolism - Monocytes/macrophages store materials that are
not degraded satisfactorily - The breakdown of cellular structures requires a
series of functioning enzymes
28Cytoplasmic changes of Monocyte/Macrophage
- Hereditary absence or dysfunction of these
enzymes causes an increase in substrate
concentration and a decrease or absence of the
product - These conditions are commonly known as storage
cell diseases - Table 26-1 summarizes some of the more common
storage cell diseases
29Cytoplasmic changes of Monocyte/Macrophage
- The most common lipid storage disorder is Gaucher
disease, in which there is an inability to
degrade glucocerbroside due to a deficiency of
glucocerebrosidase - Glucocerbroside accumulates in the
monocyte/macrophage system of the BM, spleen and
liver - Neurons of the CNS may also be affected
- Gaucher disease is an autosomal recessive trait
with more than 65 mutations known to cause the
disease
30Cytoplasmic changes of Monocyte/Macrophage
- Gaucher disease occurs in three types
- Chronic adult type (type 1)
- Acute infantile neuronopathic type (type 2)
- Less defined subacute neuronopathic type (type 3)
- Characteristics of the three types of Gaucher
disease are listed in Table 26-2
31Cytoplasmic changes of Monocyte/Macrophage
- A characteristic Gaucher cell is large with an
eccentric nucleus and a cytoplasm that has been
described as chicken scratch - Many patients with Gaucher disease have a normal
life span, but the clinical span is large from
asymptomatic to severely incapacitated
32Gaucher Cell
33Niemann-Pick disease
- N-P disease is another type of storage cell
disease caused by a deficiency of
sphingomyelinase - This deficiency allows sphingomyelin to
accumulate in the spleen, liver, lungs, BM and
sometimes the brain - Cholesterol and other lipids accumulate as well
along with a decrease in ceramides - Inheritance is autosomal recessive. Genetic locus
is C18
34Niemann-Pick disease
- N-P disease is described in 4 types with a broad
range of symptoms - Many of the patients eventually exhibit symptoms
related to brain damage - Presentation with difficulty of motor functions
(swallowing, walking talking) is typical - Progressive dementia and psychosis leading to a
nonambulatory vegetative state may result
35Niemann-Pick disease
- The typical N-P Cell is large with an accentric
nucleus and foamy cytoplasm - The cytoplasm is filled with uniformly sized
droplets of accumulated lipid - The N-P cell is not unique to N-P disease, but
may be seen in other lipid storage diseases - There is no successful treatment
36Neimann-Pick Cell
37Other Storage Cell Diseases
- Other inherited storage cell diseases do not have
significant hematologic implications - These include gangliosidosis, Tay-Sachs disease
and Fabry disease - Acquired hyperlipidemias occur when a condition
produces too much lipids for monocyte/macrophage
cells to process - May be primary disease (hypercholesterol-emia),
or secondary (diabetes or chronic leukemia)
38Morphologic Alterations of Lymphocytes
- Morphologic variations in lymphocytes are not as
frequent or as potentially debilitating as those
seen I neutrophils - Lymphocyte changes are most often directly
related to antigenic stimulation and are
considered normal - Lymphocytes demonstrating these normal changes as
a result of stimulation are termed reactive,
stimulated or committed
39Reactive Lymphocytes
- Stimulated B cells undergo morphologic changes to
both the nucleus and cytoplasm - Once proliferation begins, the cells mature into
plasma cells that synthesize and secrete large
quantities of immunoglobulin whose binding
specificity is the same as the one from the
initially stimulated cell - These changes progress and regress over time
- T cells also undergo reactive changes as a
result of clonal expansion
40Reactive Lymphocytes
- Characteristics of reactive lymphocytes
- Vacuolated cytoplasm
- Radial basophilia
- Cytoplasm indented by adjacent cells
- Peripheral basophilia
- Large azurophilic granules
- Nucleoli may be present
- Chomatin appears finer and dispersed
- Cytoplasm may be deeply basophilic
41Reactive Lymphocytes
- Infectious mononucleosis is an example of a viral
illness that exhibits reactive lymphocytes - Infectious mononucleosis is caused by two strains
of the Epstein Barr virus EBV-1 (type A) and
EBV-2 (type B) - Childhood forms seem to be less severe that that
seen in teenagers - IM is also known as kissing disease as the
virus is found in body fluids, especially saliva,
and can directly transmitted through sharing of
body fluids
42Reactive Lymphocytes
43Lymphocyte Nuclear Abnormalities
- Nuclear abnormalities associated with lymphocytes
will be discussed in chapter 36 and include
clefting (Butt Cells) and Sezary Cells seen with
Sezary syndrome.
44Lymphocyte Cytoplasmic Abnormalities
- Vacuolization of the cytoplasm is seen in
mucopolysaccharidoses, Gaucher disease and
others. - Azurophilic granulation can be seen in response
to antigenic stimulation and in Hunters syndrome - Increased amounts of non-staining materials may
also be seen - Box 26-3 summarizes morphologic alterations in
lymphocytes
45Nonmorphologic Alterations of Lymphocytes
- Most of the nonmorphologic changes of lymphocytes
are seen in diseases of immunologic function - The alteration results from a lack of the
specific cell type or from failure of a cell to
act in a mature manner - B cell alterations include hypogammaglobulin-emias
, agammaglobulinemias and dysgamma-globulinemias
(qualitative and quantitative) - T cell alterations can be described by cell
marker phenotypes
46Quantitative Alterations of Leukocytes
- Alterations of leukocyte numbers must be
determined using the absolute leukocyte count - Absolute counts may be provided by auto-mated
equipment or may be calculated by multiplying the
total WBC count by the percentage of the
population on the differential - 10.0 x 109/L (WBC) x 0.4 ( neutrophils) 4.0 x
109/L neutrophils
47Quantitative Alterations of Leukocytes
- WBC count is dependent on several factors
- Age of the patient
- Ethnicity
- Granulocyte kinetics are influenced by
- Input from bone marrow pools
- Changes in proportion of marginating to
circulating pools - Changes caused by disease
48Quantitative Alterations of Leukocytes
- Spuriously elevated granulocyte counts may be
seen when the marginating pool is decreased,
increasing the circulating pool - Decreased counts can occur when a large number of
granulocytes are in the storage pool - Causes of both leukocytosis and leukopenia are
many and the causes for both may be the same
49Alterations in Granulocyte Number
- Neutrophilia
- Acute infections
- Hemorrhage/hemolysis
- Inflammatory changes
- Intoxications/poisons
- Medications
- Myeloproliferative disorders
- Malignancy
- Physiologic response to stress
- Neutropenia
- Acute infections
- Hemodialysis
- Overwhelming inflammation/infection
- Medications
- Physical agents (x-rays)
- Secondary to autoimmune disorders
- Aplastic/hypoplastic states
50Alterations in Eosinophil Number
- Eosinophilia is definced as gt0.5 x 109
eosinophils per Liter - Conditions associated with eosinophilia
- Allergic responses
- Medication usage
- Skin diseases, dermatitis
- Parasitic infestations
- Some autoimmune disorders
- Some malignancies
- Eos may be reduced in response to
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and emotional
stress
51Alterations in Basophil Number
- Basophilia (gt0.15 x 109/L) is seen in patients
with hypoactive thyroid conditions, ulcerative
colitis and some types of nephrosis as well as
certain malignancies (CML) - Increases in tissue basophils are seen in
patients with contact dermatitis and delayed
hypersensitivity reactions - Basophil counts may be low in patients with
hyperthyroidism and stress
52Alterations in Monocyte/Macrophage Number
- Monocytosis (gt 0.8 x 109/L) is seen whenever
there is an increased amount of cell damage - Conditions causing monocytosis include active TB,
subacute bacterial endocarditis, syphilis,
parasitic and rickettsial infections, some
autoimmune diseases and truama - Monocytes are also increased during recovery from
acute infections
53Alterations in Lymphocyte Number
- Normal lymphocyte range in adults is 34 of WBCs
or 0.6 to 5.5 x 109/L - The value is higher in children at 70 or 2.0-7.0
x 109/L - Lymphocytosis is present in an adult when the
absolute lymphocyte count is higher than 5.5 x
109/L
54Alterations in Lymphocyte Number
- Relative lymphocytosis can be seen in patients
with skin rashes from viral diseases such as
measles and mumps - It is also seen in patients with thyrotoxicosis
and those convalescing from acute infections - Lymphocytosis is rare in children with the
exception of pertussis infection
55Alterations in Lymphocyte Number
- Causes of Reactive Lymphocytosis
- Beta-streptococcus
- CMV
- Drugs
- EBV (IM)
- Syphilis
- Toxoplasmosis
- Vaccination
- Viral hepatitis
56Alterations in Lymphocyte Number
- Relative lymphopenia may be seen in patients with
heart failure, uremia, SLE and malaria, among
other causes - Absolute lymphopenia (lt0.6 x 109/L) may be seen
in infectious hepatitis, secondary to
malignancies, some Hodgkin lymphomas, active TB,
SLE or endocrine disorders, also as a result of
drug exposure - It may also be seen in the elderly with bone
marrow depletion