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IPLab:Lab 5:Gaucher Disease

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Contents

Clinical SummaryEdit

This 23-year-old black female delivered a stillborn infant by Caesarean section, following which she experienced excessive uterine bleeding including the passage of blood clots. Further study revealed an enlarged spleen and thrombocytopenia (platelet count 58,000). A splenectomy was performed with an uneventful postoperative course other than persistent pain in her right leg (the right hip had been fractured 2 years earlier). Subsequently she developed aseptic necrosis of the left femoral head requiring a prosthetic replacement. Microscopic evaluation of the bone removed at the time of surgery revealed Gaucher cells in the marrow space.

Autopsy FindingsEdit

The surgical specimen was a 935 gram spleen. Its surface was pale with an area of bluish discoloration. The cut surface revealed the same pale appearance.

ImagesEdit

Virtual MicroscopyEdit

Study QuestionsEdit


Additional ResourcesEdit

The normal platelet count is 150,000 to 400,000/mm³.

Trauma (from fracture or surgery) is one cause of asceptic (or avascular) necrosis of bone, which is defined as the death of bone and bone marrow in the abscence of an infectious agent.

The normal spleen weighs 155 grams.