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22 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
What are the chronic leukemias associated with T-lymphoblasts?
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Sezary Syndrome, CLL-T (both L2)
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What are the acute leukemias associated with T-lymphoblasts?
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ALL-T (L2), ALL-null (L1), ALL-common(L1)
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What are the chronic leukemias associated with B-lymphoblasts?
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CLL-B (L3)
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What are the acute leukemias associated with B-lymphoblasts?
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ALL-B (L3)
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What are the chronic leukemias associated with monoblasts?
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Chonic monocytic (M5), chronic myelomonocytic (M4)
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What are the acute leukemias associated with monoblasts?
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Acute monocytic (M5), acute myelomonocytic (M5)
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What are the chronic leukemias associated with myeloblasts?
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CML (M1, 2 and 3), Polycythemia rubra vera (M1), myelofibrosis (M1)
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What are the acute leukemias associated with myeloblasts?
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AML (M2 and M1), Promyelocytic (M1)
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What are the chronic leukemias associated with eos-myeloblasts?
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Eosinophilic (rare)
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What are the chronic leukemias associated with normoblasts?
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Chronic erythroid (M6, rare)
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What are the acute leukemias associated with normoblasts?
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acute erythroleukemia (M6)
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What are the chronic leukemias associated with megakaryoblasts?
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Idiopathic thrombocytopenia (M7)
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What are the acute leukemias associated wwith megakaryoblasts?
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acute megakaryocytic leukemias (M7)
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What type of cell proliferates in MM, and what is its histologic appearance
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Monoclonal plasma cell, fried egg appearance
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Where does MM arise?
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bone marrow
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The 2 most common ab's, in order, are:
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IgG (55%), IgA (25%)
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Common multiple myeloma symptoms are:
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lytic bone lesions and hypercalcemia, renal insifficiency, increased suscpetibility to infection, anemia
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This disease is associated with:
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primary amyloidosis
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Ig light chains are also called:
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Bence Jones proteins
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3 key diagnostic features:
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lytic bone lesions on x-ray, M-spike on serum protein electrophoresis, Bence-Jones proteins in urine
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Red blood cell appearance on peripheral smear:
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Rouleaux formation (poker chips)
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What 2 differences are seen in Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia?
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M-spike is IgM, no lytic lesions
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