acanthocytosis
Last reviewed 01/2018
Acanthocytes are red blood cells that show many spicules when viewed on a wet film.
- acanthocytosis refers to the transformation of the normal biconcave disc erythrocyte into one with a few irregularly shaped external projections distributed unevenly at its membrane surface
- associated with a variety of inherited
and acquired disorders
- acanthocytes were first observed in abetalipoproteinemia more than 50 years ago
- since the first association the occurrence of acanthocytes
has been reported in several other hereditary and acquired disorders including
- chorea-acanthocytosis
- McLeod phenotype
- hereditary spherocytosis with a beta-spectrin deficiency
- alcoholic cirrhosis
- uraemia
- vitamin E deficiency
- anorexia nervosa
- hypothyroidism
- an
acanthocyte differs morphologically from the echinocyte, readily induced by contact
with glass, which has 10-40 regularly shaped external projections distributed
evenly at the membrane surface
- the acanthocyte is characterized by the presence of a few irregularly shaped external projections distributed unevenly at the membrane surface
Reference:
- (1) L.D. Walensky, N. Mohandas and I.V. Lux SE, Disorders of the red cell membrane. In: R.H. Handin, I.V. Lux SE and T.P. Stossel, Editors, Blood: principles and practice in hematology (2nd Edition ed.), Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia (2003):1709-1858.