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Stimulation Information and Courses from MediaLab, Inc.

These are the MediaLab courses that cover Stimulation and links to relevant pages within the course.

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Fundamentals of Hemostasis
Primary Hemostasis – Platelet Kinetics

Kinetic Processes Specific to Platelets. Adhesion – When platelets adhere to exposed collagen, they take on a characteristic “spiny” shape. Their inherent stickiness, and the aforementioned spiny shape serve to compliment each other during this process. Von Willebrands Factor (vWF) is absorbed by surface receptors on both the platelet and exposed subendothelial tissue, thereby linking the platelets to the tissue. Release – This process occurs prior to aggregation. Platelets dump the contents of their granules (ADP, Serotonin, & Calcium), which aids the upcoming aggregation process by acting as a chemical signal. Aggregation – Platelets physically bind to each other, not just to the exposed subendothelial walls and collagen of the breached vessel. Platelet aggregation requires sufficient chemical signal stimulation. Stabilization (technically part of secondary hemostasis as fibrin is a product of secondary hemostasis)– This process strengthens the platelet plug with the addition of interwoven fibrin strands, ultimately producing a fibrin clot. The durable fibrin clot is the ultimate goal of hemostatic processes.

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White Cell and Platelet Disorders: Peripheral Blood Clues to Nonneoplastic Conditions
The upper photograph of a bone marrow section reveals distinct hyperplasia with total replacement of marrow fat. A bone marrow smear stained with Wright/Giemsa is displayed in the lower photograph. Calculate the M:E ratio between myeloid and erythroid cells found in the lower photograph. The total peripheral blood white blood cell count was 5,400/cumm. This bone marrow architecture may be found in each of the following conditions except:View Page
Toxic granulation noted in the neutrophils' cytoplasm reflects an increase in activity of the: (more than one answer may be correct)View Page
Basophils

A basophil and a small lymphocyte are compared in the same field of the upper photograph, A single basophil is shown in the lower photograph.The cytoplasmic granules of the basophil are larger than the granules of toxic granulation.They contain chemical mediators of immediate hypersensitivity, and are found in the cytoplasm and overlying the nucleus (better seen in the lower photograph). Basophilic granules stain metachromatically with toluidine blue indicating the presence of acid mucopolysaccharide or proteoglycans, both thought to be heparin or heparin-like substances.Basophils are related to tissue mast cells, each involved in hypersensitivity responses and following anaphylactic episodes.Under the stimulation of complement components C3a and C5a, many mediators are released from the basophil granules, including histamine, heparin, and eosinophil chemotactic factors of anaphylaxis, or ECF-A.Basophils are the least common neutrophils in the peripheral blood, comprising 2% or less of the differential count.The presence of large granules of irregular size in basophils and the admixture of eosinophilic granules may indicate dysplastic changes associated with myelodysplastic disorders and leukemia.

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