Volume 18, Issue 3 pp. 207-213
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Surface Features of Sezary Cells: A Scanning Electron Microscopy Study of 5 Cases

Aaron Polliack M.D.

Corresponding Author

Aaron Polliack M.D.

Department of Haematology, Hadassah University Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel

Associate Professor, Department of Haematology, Hadassah University Hospital, Jerusalem, IsraelSearch for more papers by this author
Meir Djaldetti

Meir Djaldetti

Department of Internal Medicine, Hasharon Hospital, Tel-Aviv, Israel

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Felix Reyes

Felix Reyes

Unité de Recherches sur les Anemies de l'INSERM, CHU Henri Mondor, Creteil, France

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Peter Biberfeld

Peter Biberfeld

Patologiska Institution, Karolinska Sjukhuset, Stockholm, Sweden

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Marie Therese Daniel

Marie Therese Daniel

Laboratoire Central d'Hematologie — Cytologie Hopital Saint Louis, Paris, France

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George Flandrin

George Flandrin

Laboratoire Central d'Hematologie — Cytologie Hopital Saint Louis, Paris, France

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First published: March 1977
Citations: 5

Abstract

The surface features of circulating cells from 5 patients with typical Sezary's Syndrome (SS) are described using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Sezary cells prepared by different methods, with and without prior fixation in cell suspension, showed similar surface architectures. SS cells were mostly spherical and moderate to markedly villous in appearance, and in this respect, resembled the majority of circulating lymphocytes from patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL). A proportion of cells were larger and more irregular in shape while others had small extensions of cytoplasm resembling small uropods with clusters of polarised microvilli. Despite the latter findings, most SS cells cannot be distinguished from CLL cells on the basis of their surface architecture under the SEM.

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