Difference between revisions of "Giant cells"

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| drug reaction, neoplasm, foreign body, infection, idiopathic, autoimmune, allergic
| drug reaction, neoplasm, foreign body, infection, idiopathic, autoimmune, allergic
| [[granuloma|granulomatous inflammation]]
| [[granuloma|granulomatous inflammation]]
| [[Image:Crohn%27s_disease_-_colon_-_very_high_mag.jpg|thumb|150px|Granuloma (WC)]]
| [[Image:Crohn%27s_disease_-_colon_-_very_high_mag.jpg|thumb|150px|center|Granuloma (WC)]]
|-
|-
| Langhans giant cell  
| Langhans giant cell  

Revision as of 16:05, 28 August 2014

Giant cells are "big" cells with multiple nuclei. They come in different flavours, which are suggestive of causality.

Giant cell types

List:

  • Touton giant cell.
  • Osteoclast-like giant cell.
  • Foreign body type giant cell.

Table

Type Histology DDx Other Image
Touton giant cell nuclei form a ring around the cell periphery juvenile xanthogranuloma, Erdheim-Chester disease high lipid content lesions[1]
JXG (WC)
Epithelioid type scattered nuclei[2] drug reaction, neoplasm, foreign body, infection, idiopathic, autoimmune, allergic granulomatous inflammation
Granuloma (WC)
Langhans giant cell peripheral eccentric nuclei[2] ? not to be confused with Langerhans cells
LGC (WC)
Osteoclast-like giant cells round nuclei osteoclasts, others AKA osteoclast-type giant cells

See also

References

  1. URL: http://granuloma.homestead.com/giant_cells.html. Accessed on: 7 February 2011.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Borley, Neil R.; Warren, Bryan F. (2007). Instant Pathology (1st ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 7. ISBN 978-1405132909.