Difference between revisions of "Crystals in body fluids"
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Revision as of 18:48, 5 August 2011
This article deals with crystals in body fluids.
Crystals
Joint crystals
Types:[1]
- Gout = needle-shaped, negatively birefringent, yellow when aligned.
- Pseudogout = rhomboid-shaped, positively birefringent, blue when aligned.
Notes:
- Pseudogout also known as CPPD = calcium pyrophosphate dehydrogenase.
- Memory device: ABC+ = aligned blue is calcium & cuboid - positively birefringent.
Images:
- Crystals - schematic (stpetes.org) from Microscopic Examination for Crystals in Synovial Fluid (stpetes.org).
- Blue rhomboid CPPD crystals (med.utah.edu).
Urine crystals
Types - morphology:
- Envelope shape (calcium oxalate).
- Diamond shape (uric acid).
- Coffin-lid shape (struvite).
- Hexagonal shape (cysteine).
Notes:
- Memory devices:
- Diamonds are see-through; ergo, uric acid stones not seen on KUB.
- Calcium oxalate = envelope, uric acid = diamond.
- Uric acid crystals: usually dissolve in formalin... but do not dissolve in alcohol.[2]
- Calcium oxalate crystals are seen in the context of ethylene glycol poisoning.[3]
Diseases
Gout
General
- Classically big toe.
Microscopic
Features:[4]
- Tophi (advanced)
- Aggregates of urate crystals.
- Reactive granulomatous inflammation.
- Fibrotic synovium.
Images:
See also
References
- ↑ TN05 RH6
- ↑ WG. 8 January 2010.
- ↑ Saukko, Pekka; Knight, Bernard (2004). Knight's Forensic Pathology (3rd ed.). A Hodder Arnold Publication. pp. 589. ISBN 978-0340760444.
- ↑ URL: http://pathologyoutlines.com/joints.html#gout. Accessed on: 5 August 2011.