Diagnosis of platelet dense granule storage pool disease and release defects at present requires a combination of studies including lumiaggregometry, conventional platelet aggregation, radioactive serotonin uptake and release, and electron microscopy. Flow cytometric methods have been developed to study platelet activation, aggregation, and alpha-granule protein release. Here, we have investigated the use of flow cytometry for analysis of platelet dense granule content uptake and release using mepacrine as a fluorescent marker. Mepacrine (quinacrine) is rapidly taken up and localized in dense granules of platelets. For the assay, as little as 20 microliters of blood from a fingerstick collected without anticoagulant or venous blood collected in 3.8% sodium citrate were diluted 1:40 with 2 ml Hanks balanced salt solution (BSS). 300 microliters of this cell suspension were incubated with mepacrine alone, or simultaneously with a mouse monoclonal antibody to human platelet glycoprotein IIb (Tab), used as a platelet-specific marker. The bound monoclonal antibody was then indirectly labelled with the fluorochrome, RED670. 100 microliters of the sample were further diluted with Hanks BSS for one- or two-colour flow cytometric analysis. To verify that mepacrine uptake was related to platelet dense granule content, platelets of beige mice, a strain with dense granule deficiency, were examined. Their mepacrine uptake was substantially decreased compared to that of normal mice. Decreased mepacrine uptake also was demonstrated in platelets of a patient with Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome in which a deficiency of platelet dense granules is characteristic. In both human and mouse platelets, mepacrine uptake was proportional to platelet size. Thrombin induced mepacrine release in a dose-dependent manner from 0.003 to 0.4 U/ml. Therefore both platelet uptake and release of mepacrine can be readily detected by flow cytometry. Flow cytometry provides an attractive alternative to aggregation and radioactive serotonin as methods to study defects in platelet dense granule function.
Hematopoietic activity induced by growth factors can produce changes in bone marrow SI that may simulate bone marrow involvement by musculoskeletal tumors.
Anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) is a unique clinical and pathologic subtype of lymphoma characterized by the proliferation of large, highly pleomorphic CD30-positive cells. Overall 70% to 80% of children with ALCL are cured with modern chemotherapy regimens, but the disease is often resistant to multiple therapies after relapse. Single agent vinblastine therapy has been effective in some cases of refractory ALCL. We report a case of ALCL originally diagnosed in an 8-year-old girl. After relapse, the disease was refractory to multiagent chemotherapy, but has showed remarkable response to, and dependence on, single agent vinblastine treatment for almost 7 years.
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