Oxidant Information and Courses from MediaLab, Inc.
These are the MediaLab courses that cover Oxidant and links to relevant pages within the course.
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| Each of the following is considered to be a virulence factor in Cryptococcus neoformans except: | View Page |
| G6PD deficiency A ten-year-old boy came to a physician's attention because of recent jaundice and icteric sclerae. The immediate laboratory work revealed: Hct 24%(normal 36%-47%), MCV 79.5 fl (normal 78-95fl),RDW 13%(normal 11.5-15.0%). His blood smear findings are reflected in these photomicrographs. Note particularly the spherocytes in the upper picture. Some resemble a half-blister with the other half of the cell containing solidly-staining hemoglobin. These are called eccentrocytes. When present, they should trigger a search for red cell hereditary G-6PD deficiency and the oxidant that triggered hemolysis. These morphological findings are only clues; specific testing for G-6PD deficiency should be performed. The blue arrows in the upper photomicrograph are directed toward solid-staining spherocytes in which the cell membrane is beaded by inclusions wrapped within the cell membrane, suggesting the remains of denatured hemoglobin. Included on the smear is a target cell, several acanthocytes, a smudge cell, and a few schistocytes. The lower photomicrograph is supravital staining of affected red blood cells, verifying the presence of Heinz bodies. This disorder was first recognized during the Korean war in 10% of black American soldiers given the antimalarial drug primiquine. | View Page |
| Schistocytes vs. bite cells Schistocyte is a general term for a fragmented red blood cell that may assume various shapes, some with horn-like projections (keratocytes), triangle-forms (triangulocytes), and helmet shapes, as illustrated in the upper photograph. Schistocytes are formed when erythrocytes are forced through a vessel blocked with interlacing fibrin strands and the red cells are sliced into fragments. True schistocytes are devoid of central pallor. These damaged cells continue to circulate while healing their torn edges. Finally, they are removed by the spleen. Bite cells (lower photograph) appear when an abnormal hemoglobin aggregate (Heinz body) is nibbled out of a red cell's cytoplasm by the spleen leaving a bitten apple appearance. Glucose 6-PD deficiency secondary to chemical poisoning or injury by oxidant drugs are settings for Heinz body formation, and the telltale bite cells remain as evidence. Hemolytic anemia associated with severe liver disease is another setting where bite cells are formed. | View Page |