| Literature DB >> 28840997 |
Myung Chul Suh1, Ji Yeon Ham1, Tae In Park2, Joon Ho Moon3, Jang Soo Suh4.
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28840997 PMCID: PMC5587832 DOI: 10.3343/alm.2017.37.6.547
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Lab Med ISSN: 2234-3806 Impact factor: 3.464
Fig. 1Peripheral blood and bone marrow aspiration smear findings. (A) Peripheral blood findings show leukoerythroblastic reaction and no circulating mast cells (Wright-Giemsa stain, ×400). (B) Bone marrow aspiration finding shows atypical promastocytes, which are hypogranulated and degranulated bizarre-looking cells mostly with heavy cytoplasmic vacuoles. Characteristic features of surface projections with eccentrically positioned oval nuclei and hypogranulated cytoplasm, with focal granule accumulations with or without granule fusion are seen. Cells with bilobed and polylobed nuclei with high to low nucleus-to-cytoplasm ratio are frequently observed (Wright-Giemsa stain, ×1,000).
Fig. 2Immunohistochemical staining of CD2 and CD25, which are used as markers for immature mast cells. (A) Im-munohistochemical staining shows positive CD2 staining. Bone marrow section showing multifocal and dense infiltrates of mast cells (×200). (B) High-power view of CD2 cytoplasmic staining of mast cells (×1,000). (C) Immunohistochemical staining shows negative CD25 staining (×200).