Howell-Jolly bodies

Howell-Jolly bodies
How·ell-Jol·ly bodies (houґəl zho-leґ) [W.H. Howell; Justin Marie Jules Jolly, French histologist, 1870–1953] see under body.

Medical dictionary. 2011.

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  • Howell-Jolly body — Howell Jolly bodies are histopathological findings of basophilic nuclear remnants (clusters of DNA) in circulating erythrocytes. During maturation in the bone marrow erythrocytes normally expel their nuclei, but in some cases a small portion of… …   Wikipedia

  • Howell-Jolly body — How·ell Jol·ly body hau̇ əl zhȯ lē , jäl ē n one of the basophilic granules that are prob. nuclear fragments, that sometimes occur in red blood cells, and that indicate by their appearance in circulating blood that red cells are leaving the bone …   Medical dictionary

  • Howell-Jolly-Körperchen — A: Cabot Ring B: Howell Jolly Körperchen Howell Jolly Körperchen (engl. Howell Jolly bodies) sind pathologische Zellkernfragmente in den normalerweise kernlosen Erythrozyten, die bei Asplenie oder bei hämolytischen und megaloblastären Anämien… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Jolly bodies — Jol·ly bodies (zho leґ) [Justin Marie Jules Jolly, French histologist, 1870–1953] Howell Jolly bodies; see under body …   Medical dictionary

  • Jolly bodies — Howell Jolly b s …   Medical dictionary

  • Howell bodies — Howell Jolly bodies smooth, round remnants of nuclear chromatin seen in erythrocytes in megaloblastic anemia, hemolytic anemia, and after splenectomy. Called also Jolly b s. Howell Jolly bodies …   Medical dictionary

  • Jolly — Friedrich, German neurologist, 1844–1904. See J. reaction. Justin, French histologist, 1870–1953. See J. bodies, under body, Howell J. bodies, under body …   Medical dictionary

  • Howell — William H., U.S. physiologist, 1860–1945. See H. unit, H. Jolly bodies, under body …   Medical dictionary

  • Justin Marie Jolly — (August 6, 1870 ndash; 1953) was a French physician known for his work in haematology. He studied medicine at the Collège de France under Louis Antoine Ranvier (1835 1922) and Louis Charles Malassez (1842 1909) where he learned histological… …   Wikipedia

  • Inclusion bodies — are nuclear or cytoplasmic aggregates of stainable substances, usually proteins. They typically represent sites of viral multiplication in a bacterium or a eukaryotic cell and usually consist of viral capsid proteins.CompositionProtein inclusion… …   Wikipedia

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