Cells are suspended in fluid and tagged with fluorescent antibodies.
This is for informational purposes only. For medical advice or diagnosis, consult a professional. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more
The microscopic world of hematology is often a battle between what we see and what is actually there. In the diagnosis of neoplastic diseases, the "story" is one of collaboration between traditional morphology and the high-tech precision of flow cytometry. The Visual Clues (Morphology)
It detects "CD markers" (Clusters of Differentiation). CD34: Signals a primitive, immature cell. CD19/CD20: Confirms a B-cell lineage. CD13/CD33: Points toward myeloid involvement. The Synthesis: A Final Diagnosis
The true power lies in the overlap. A pathologist might see "monomorphous medium-sized blasts" (Morphology) and use Flow Cytometry to confirm they are actually "CD10+ B-lymphoblasts."
Everything begins with a blood smear or bone marrow aspirate. Under the microscope, a pathologist looks for "blasts"—cells that have lost their way. Are the cells abnormally large? The Nucleus: Is the chromatin clumped or fine? The Clues: Presence of Auer rods or specific granules.
Cells are suspended in fluid and tagged with fluorescent antibodies.
This is for informational purposes only. For medical advice or diagnosis, consult a professional. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more Flow Cytometry in Neoplastic Hematology Morphol...
The microscopic world of hematology is often a battle between what we see and what is actually there. In the diagnosis of neoplastic diseases, the "story" is one of collaboration between traditional morphology and the high-tech precision of flow cytometry. The Visual Clues (Morphology) Cells are suspended in fluid and tagged with
It detects "CD markers" (Clusters of Differentiation). CD34: Signals a primitive, immature cell. CD19/CD20: Confirms a B-cell lineage. CD13/CD33: Points toward myeloid involvement. The Synthesis: A Final Diagnosis AI responses may include mistakes
The true power lies in the overlap. A pathologist might see "monomorphous medium-sized blasts" (Morphology) and use Flow Cytometry to confirm they are actually "CD10+ B-lymphoblasts."
Everything begins with a blood smear or bone marrow aspirate. Under the microscope, a pathologist looks for "blasts"—cells that have lost their way. Are the cells abnormally large? The Nucleus: Is the chromatin clumped or fine? The Clues: Presence of Auer rods or specific granules.