acid-phosphatase and Eosinophilia

acid-phosphatase has been researched along with Eosinophilia* in 12 studies

Other Studies

12 other study(ies) available for acid-phosphatase and Eosinophilia

ArticleYear
Evaluation of gingival tissue samples for predicting the time of death using histological and biochemical tests.
    Forensic science international, 2021, Volume: 324

    Thanatochemistry also known as chemistry of death and is used to determine post mortem interval (PMI). It is arguably one of the critical steps in forensic investigation. Recent addition of analyzing biochemical changes along with the traditional methods have gained importance, as they help us to record very early changes in the tissue specimens. In this view, our study aimed to correlate both histological changes and enzymatic changes in gingival tissue samples at intervals of immediate, 1 h, 5 h, 24 h and 48 h after death. Histologic changes noted were loss of epithelial architecture, chromatin clumping, nuclear vacuolation, karryopyknosis, eosinophilia and wide intercellular junctions. Two enzymes which differentiate between the autolytic phase (acid phosphatase) and putrefactive phase (ammonia) of decomposition were evaluated using UV spectrometer. Results in our study demonstrated there were variations as in gradual increase in ammonia levels (1.13±0.24-26.6±2.09) and gradual decrease in acid phosphatase levels (5.61±0.67-1.25±0.53) at different time intervals till 48 h. The cellular changes in gingival tissue could also be related to time. The result of our study helps us to identify potential of enzymatic changes which when correlated with histological reports helps us to predict the time of death accurately. Replicating this experiment in various known taphonomic conditions and other enzymes could highlight the usefulness of gingival tissue samples in determining time of death.

    Topics: Acid Phosphatase; Adult; Ammonia; Apoptosis; Cell Nucleus; Chromatin; Eosinophilia; Epithelial Cells; Female; Forensic Pathology; Gingiva; Humans; Intercellular Junctions; Male; Necrosis; Postmortem Changes; Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet; Vacuoles; Young Adult

2021
Metastatic prostatic carcinoma presenting as an oncocytic tumor.
    The American journal of surgical pathology, 1992, Volume: 16, Issue:10

    We discuss a 63-year-old man who presented with a metastatic tumor in an inguinal lymph node. By light microscopy, the tumor cells were characterized by a finely granular eosinophilic cytoplasm. A diagnosis of metastatic oncocytic carcinoma was made based on the results of an ultrastructural examination, which showed the cytoplasm of the tumor cells to be filled with mitochondria. Results of immunocytochemical studies showed positive reactivity for prostatic acid phosphatase and prostate-specific antigen. A transurethral resection of the prostate showed an oncocytic adenocarcinoma of the prostate, apparently the first of its kind, which was demonstrated to be the site of origin of the inguinal lymph node metastasis.

    Topics: Acid Phosphatase; Adenocarcinoma; Adenoma; Cell Transformation, Neoplastic; Diagnosis, Differential; Eosinophilia; Humans; Hyperplasia; Immunohistochemistry; Lymphatic Metastasis; Male; Microscopy, Electron; Middle Aged; Mitochondria; Prostate-Specific Antigen; Prostatic Neoplasms

1992
Experimental eosinophilia and inflammation--the effect of various inflammatory mediators and chemoattractants.
    Experimental pathology, 1986, Volume: 29, Issue:3

    An experimental subcutaneous inflammation was produced in guinea pigs with peripheral blood eosinophilia. The eosinophilia resulted from two subsequent infections with Trichinella spiralis larvae. One group of guinea pigs served as non-infected control. Inflammation was induced by carrageenan, bradykinin, histamine, platelet activating factor and eosinophilotactic factors of lymphocytic or neutrophilic origin. Whereas in the control group no eosinophil granulocytic response was observed, this response was seen in the group with peripheral blood eosinophilia. The inflammatory substances and mediators (carrageenan, bradykinin, histamine, platelet activating factor) did not attract eosinophils alone, but also neutrophils. Under peripheral blood eosinophilia within the time course of the inflammatory reaction a second emigration with a shifted neutrophil/eosinophil ratio in favour of eosinophils was found. This could be due to a generation of chemoattractants by the injected substances themselves or more probably, by already emigrated granulocytes. Neither histamine, bradykinin, carrageenan, nor the eosinophilotactic factors (ECF's) in the concentrations used did release the cytotoxic major basic protein from eosinophils. Platelet activating factor exhibited a release of major basic protein from some eosinophils but no release of the peroxidase under our experimental conditions. The immigration of sufficient numbers of eosinophils into inflammatory areas might be one cause of the reduction of the inflammatory edema found in a previous investigation under similar conditions.

    Topics: Acid Phosphatase; Animals; Arylsulfatases; Blood Proteins; Bradykinin; Carrageenan; Cell Movement; Chemotactic Factors; Chemotactic Factors, Eosinophil; Disease Models, Animal; Eosinophil Granule Proteins; Eosinophilia; Eosinophils; Female; Guinea Pigs; Histamine; Inflammation; Isoenzymes; Male; Neutrophils; Peroxidase; Peroxidases; Platelet Activating Factor; Ribonucleases; Time Factors; Trichinellosis

1986
Ultrastructural and cytochemical studies in normal Japanese quail (Coturnix coturnix japonica) eosinophils and in those from birds with experimentally induced eosinophilia.
    Research in veterinary science, 1986, Volume: 41, Issue:2

    Normal eosinophil development in the Japanese quail (Coturnix coturnix japonica) was similar to that described in the fowl and the duck, with granulogenesis occurring in the Golgi apparatus. The characteristic lipid droplets were small in the immature eosinophils, and after staining specifically for lipid, small moieties were also traced to the Golgi apparatus. In mature eosinophils the lipid droplets measured between 1.0 and 1.5 micron in diameter and they were surrounded by profiles of smooth endoplasmic reticulum. Eosinophilia was difficult to induce in quails; injections of either horse serum or bovine serum albumin (BSA)/aluminium hydroxide produced a poor response. In some quails in which eosinophilia was produced, however, eosinophil granules showed many crescentic and vacuolated forms. The lipid droplets in the activated eosinophils were fused in many cells to form large intracellular aggregates of lipid. Quail eosinophils, which hitherto have been regarded as peroxidase-negative, had strong activity in the lipid droplets of cells from stimulated birds. It is postulated that this peroxidase-positive reaction may represent a form of ceroid or lipofuscin pigment resulting from lipid peroxidation. Acid phosphatase and trimetaphosphatase reactions were reduced in many activated cells, with a large proportion of granules being non-reactive. The results of dietary manipulations in quails appear to suggest that in stressful situations the eosinophil metabolism is altered and there is a reduction in the number of lipid droplets in the cell.

    Topics: Acid Anhydride Hydrolases; Acid Phosphatase; Animals; Bird Diseases; Bone Marrow; Coturnix; Diet; Eosinophilia; Eosinophils; Golgi Apparatus; Histocytochemistry; Microscopy, Electron; Peroxidases; Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases; Quail

1986
Fine structural and cytochemical studies of eosinophils from fowls and ducks with eosinophilia.
    Research in veterinary science, 1986, Volume: 41, Issue:2

    The ultrastructure and cytochemistry of eosinophils from adult fowl and ducks with either spontaneous or experimentally induced eosinophilia were examined. The results showed that a high proportion of the eosinophils in the peripheral blood of eosinophilic birds had ultrastructural features different from those of normal eosinophils. In both species, there was a reduction in cell size. Fowl eosinophil granules showed similar morphological changes to those seen in the quail with many crescentic and vacuolated forms being present. In eosinophilic ducks, the crystalline interna of the specific granules were often fragmented or were either partially or completely lysed. Cytochemically, peroxidase activity in both species was generally unaltered in abnormal eosinophils compared with those from normal birds. This correlates with the findings in man. However, amounts of acid phosphatase and trimetaphosphatase were reduced in many cells, with a large proportion of granules being non-reactive. The latter observation corresponds with that in quail but differs from man, in which stimulated eosinophils have increased enzymatic activity.

    Topics: Acid Anhydride Hydrolases; Acid Phosphatase; Animals; Chickens; Ducks; Eosinophilia; Eosinophils; Histocytochemistry; Microscopy, Electron; Peroxidases; Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases; Poultry Diseases

1986
Stimulation or activation of eosinophils in vivo during eosinophilia: possible role of arachidonic acid metabolism.
    Advances in experimental medicine and biology, 1982, Volume: 141

    Topics: Acid Phosphatase; Arachidonic Acid; Arachidonic Acids; Biological Transport; Cell Membrane; Deoxyglucose; Eosinophilia; Eosinophils; Hexosephosphates; Humans; Lysosomes

1982
Comparison of human eosinophils from normals and patients with eosinophilia.
    The Journal of clinical investigation, 1980, Volume: 66, Issue:6

    Previous studies of the biochemistry and physiology of eosinophils have relied upon cells obtained from patients with eosinophilia (EE). It is unknown whether such cells might have been activated or partially exhausted by the pathological state causing eosinophilia. We examined cell surface charge, membrane transport of deoxyglucose, activation of lyso-somal acid phosphatase, and oxidative metabolism to provide a profile to compare EE with purified normal eosinophils (NE) and normal neutrophils. Eosinophils or neutrophils were obtained in >95% purity from normal individuals and patients with eosinophilia of diverse etiologies. Cell surface charge was determined by electrophoretic mobility in micromoles per second per volt per centimeter. Normal eosinophils demonstrated a surface charge of 2.46+/-0.03. Stimulation of the cells by zymosan-activated serum (ZAS) reduced the surface charge to 1.82+/-0.02. In contrast, the charge of "resting" EE was already reduced (1.89+/-0.05) and was not altered by ZAS. Resting and stimulated neutrophils had a charge of 1.98+/-0.01 and 1.69+/-0.02, respectively. Uptake of [(3)H]2-deoxyglucose has been shown to reflect carrier-facilitated hexose transport in granulocytes. Deoxyglucose uptake by resting NE and NE stimulated by ZAS was 2.40+/-0.40 and 5.44+/-0.39 (cpm x 10(-3)/2 x 10(5) eosinophils), respectively. Resting and stimulated EE demonstrated deoxyglucose uptake of 7.55+/-0.58 and 15.3+/-0.6, respectively.Lysosomal acid phosphatase was determined by an electron microscopic cytochemical technique. In normal eosinophils and neutrophils, lysosomal acid phosphatase in mature cells is held in a latent form. Normal eosinophils demonstrated weakly positive acid phosphatase activity in 7.8+/-1.2% of the specific granules. Normal eosinophils, stimulated by opsonized staphylococci or the calcium ionophore A23187, develop rapid activation of acid phosphatase in approximately 80% of the granules throughout the cells. Resting EE were usually already activated and demonstrated acid phosphatase in 48.6+/-8.6% of the granules (range, 2-95% granules positive; significant activation was observed in preparations in EE from 11 of 15 patients). Oxidative metabolism was monitored by measurement of the hexose monophosphate shunt (HMPS) (metabolism of 1-[(14)C]glucose to (14)CO(2)). Previous studies demonstrated that resting EE have an HMPS activity which is nearly that of stimulated neutrophils, yet EE remain capable of further 7-10-fold in

    Topics: Acid Phosphatase; Biological Transport; Deoxyglucose; Eosinophilia; Eosinophils; Hexosephosphates; Hexoses; Humans; Ions; Lysosomes

1980
Arginine-rich cationic proteins of human eosinophil granules: comparison of the constituents of eosinophilic and neutrophilic leukocytes.
    Laboratory investigation; a journal of technical methods and pathology, 1977, Volume: 36, Issue:5

    Several arginine-rich cationic proteins previously isolated from granules of leukemic myeloid cells have been found to reside primarily in human eosinophil leukocytes. The major component has a molecular weight of 21,000 and it contains approximately 2.6 moles of zinc per mole of protein. Velocity centrifugation of cytoplasm from leukocytes of patients with marked eosinophilia showed that this group of proteins is packaged in the crystalloid-containing large eosinophil granules. Approximately 30% of the protein content of eosinophil granules belonged to this group of cationic proteins. Bactericidal or esterolytic activities of the cationic proteins were not detected, nor did they inhibit guinea pig anaphylatoxin or histamine-induced contraction. The basic protein previously demonstrated in guinea pig eosinophils may be analogous to the group of basic proteins of human eosinophils but great differences are found for molecular weight and amino acid composition.

    Topics: Acid Phosphatase; Adolescent; Arginine; Blood Bactericidal Activity; Blood Proteins; Child; Cytoplasmic Granules; Eosinophilia; Eosinophils; Female; Hodgkin Disease; Humans; Lactoferrin; Microbial Collagenase; Neutrophils; Pancreatic Elastase; Peroxidase; Peroxidases; Zinc

1977
Unique eosinophil granules in a case of T-cell lymphoma.
    Scandinavian journal of haematology, 1977, Volume: 19, Issue:2

    A 41-year-old man developed intense itching without visible cutaneous changes, epigastric pressure pain, and a slight intolerance to alcohol. He was found to have persistent blood eosinophilia. The eosinophil granulocytes were of abnormal appearance in the light microscope: larger than normal, the nuclei were multilobulated (4-6 lobes), the cytoplasm contained atypical, large granules, ample glycogen, and up to 12 vacuoles. In the electron microscope too the eosinophil granules were entirely atypical, having an electron-dense matrix, often with a light central inclusion body which was inhomogeneous, having longitudinally oriented structures with a periodicity of about 10 nm. These findings are quite contrary to normal eosinophil granules. Enzymic studies of cytoplasmic enzymes from the granulocytes revealed a greatly reduced content of eosinophil cationic proteins, whereas 5 (7) other enzymes were present in a normal or slightly reduced quantity. The phagocytic capacity of the eosinophils against latex particles was normal. The patient developed generalized lymphomas, histologically very malignant, of the convoluted, acid phosphatase positive cell type (T-cell lymphoma). Sub-population studies of lymphocytes from a lymph node revealed 58% TE cells, while the remainder were B cells. At death, 3-1/2 years after the onset of symptoms, severe endomyocardial fibrosis was found. The thymus could not be identified. It is concluded that lymphomas should be described on the bais of clinical, histological, and histochemical criteria as well as studies of lymphocyte sub-populations and that the highly unusual eosinophil granulocytes still deserve particular attention. The endocardial fibrosis is assumed to have been due to substances liberated from the eosinophil cells.

    Topics: Acid Phosphatase; Adult; Biopsy; Bone Marrow; Cytoplasmic Granules; Endomyocardial Fibrosis; Eosinophilia; Eosinophils; Granulocytes; Humans; Lymphoma; Male; Peroxidases

1977
The function of the eosinophil.
    Bibliotheca haematologica, 1968, Volume: 29

    Topics: Acid Phosphatase; Adrenal Glands; Anaphylaxis; Animals; Antibody Formation; Atropine; Bronchi; Chemotaxis; Connective Tissue; Cortisone; Eosinophilia; Eosinophils; Histamine Release; Horses; Immune Sera; Intestine, Small; Lysosomes; Parasites; Peroxidases; Phagocytosis; Pituitary Gland; Zinc

1968
Acute irradiation proctitis in man: development of eosinophilic crypt abscesses.
    Gastroenterology, 1968, Volume: 54, Issue:3

    Topics: Abscess; Acid Phosphatase; Aged; Alkaline Phosphatase; Eosinophilia; Esterases; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Oxidoreductases; Pelvic Neoplasms; Proctitis; Prospective Studies; Radiotherapy; Radiotherapy Dosage; Rectal Neoplasms; Rectum; Urinary Bladder Neoplasms; Uterine Cervical Neoplasms

1968
EOSINOPHILIC LEUKEMIA: A MORPHOLOGIC AND HISTOCHEMICAL STUDY.
    Blood, 1964, Volume: 24

    Topics: Acid Phosphatase; Adenosine Triphosphatases; Bone Marrow Cells; Dihydrolipoamide Dehydrogenase; Electrons; Eosinophilia; Histocytochemistry; Hypereosinophilic Syndrome; Leukemia; Metabolism; Microscopy; Microscopy, Electron; Microscopy, Phase-Contrast; Pathology; Phosphorylase Kinase; Succinate Dehydrogenase

1964