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diffrent immage and detail of immature white blood cells

2007-01-22 20:50:43 · 4 answers · asked by lovev2008 1 in Health Diseases & Conditions Infectious Diseases

4 answers

If you're speaking generally, Immature cells are seen in a differential during different disease states such as Leukemia or in an acute response to an infection. The details take about a whole textbook to explain. They are seen in the peripheral blood when they leave the bone marrow early for some reason. Generally, they start out as a pluripotential stem cell or blast and gradually change their nucleus and granules as they mature.

It depends on which line of WBC's you're asking about.
There are three main lines:

Neutrophil: Blast>Promyelocyte>Myelocyte>Metamyelocyte>Band>
Segmented Neutrophil, Eosinophil or Basophil.

Lymph: Lymphoblast>Prolymphocte>Large Lymphocyte>Normal Lymphocyte.

Mono: Monoblast>Promonocyte>Monocyte

2007-01-22 21:16:46 · answer #1 · answered by Some Guy 6 · 0 0

Leukemia is a group of bone marrow diseases involving an uncontrolled increase in white blood cells (leukocytes) including immature cells. Leukemia or leukaemia (see spelling differences) is a cancer of the blood or bone marrow and is characterized by an abnormal proliferation (production by multiplication) of blood cells, usually white blood cells (leukocytes). It is part of the broad group of diseases called hematological neoplasms.
There are four types of leukemias. Acute versus chronic; Lymphoid versus myeloid.
Please see the web pages for more details and images on leukemia.

2007-01-22 21:22:42 · answer #2 · answered by gangadharan nair 7 · 0 1

develop in neutrophils are a demonstration of an infection. that is named a left shift (shift to the left). 0.5 of all of your neutrophils are in a resting state, typically adhered to the interior of your blood vessels and subsequently no longer seen in a common blood attempt. In cases of an infection they go back to ciculation and also their production will develop interior the bone marrow. extremely heavy workout may also reason those resting neutrophils to flow for a couple of minutes.

2016-10-15 23:39:32 · answer #3 · answered by muniz 4 · 0 0

neutraphils

2007-01-22 20:54:14 · answer #4 · answered by SleeplessInMilwaukee 2 · 0 1

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