-
eosinophil count in the
peripheral blood exceeds 5×108/L (500/μL).
Hypereosinophilia is an
elevation in an individual's
circulating blood eosinophil count...
-
Other typical cellular changes in
necrosis include:
Cytoplasmic hypereosinophilia on
samples with H&E stain. It is seen as a
darker stain of the cytoplasm...
-
Clonal hypereosinophilia, also
termed primary hypereosinophilia or
clonal eosinophilia, is a
grouping of
hematological disorders all of
which are characterized...
-
stage is
characterized by
abnormally high
numbers of
eosinophils (
hypereosinophilia),
which causes tissue damage, most
commonly to the
lungs and the digestive...
- Lymphocyte-variant
hypereosinophilia is a rare
disorder in
which eosinophilia or
hypereosinophilia (i.e. a
large or
extremely large increase in the number...
- such as
eosinophilic leukemia,
clonal hypereosinophilia, and
Hodgkin lymphoma; lymphocyte-variant
hypereosinophilia;
extensive skin
diseases (such as exfoliative...
- A
lymphocyte is a type of
white blood cell (leukocyte) in the
immune system of most vertebrates.
Lymphocytes include T
cells (for cell-mediated and cytotoxic...
-
types of
lesions are
frequently the main
clinical consequence of
hypereosinophilia in
patients with lymphocytic-HES.
Cardiac involvement typically progresses...
- Wiskott–Aldrich
syndrome Langerhans cell
histiocytosis (LCH) Lymphocyte-variant
hypereosinophilia Pityriasis lichenoides (PL, PLC, PLVA) Post-transplant lymphoproliferative...
- of
eosinophilia (i.e. 500–1500/microliter) or, far more commonly,
hypereosinophilia (i.e. >1,500/microliter).
Although high
eosinophil levels are ****ociated...