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📍 Morphology provides the context , while Flow Cytometry provides the certainty . Together, they allow doctors to distinguish between a treatable condition and an aggressive malignancy, ensuring the patient gets the specific "key" (treatment) for their "lock" (disease).
The true power lies in the overlap. A pathologist might see "monomorphous medium-sized blasts" (Morphology) and use Flow Cytometry to confirm they are actually "CD10+ B-lymphoblasts." Flow Cytometry in Neoplastic Hematology Morphol...
Everything begins with a blood smear or bone marrow aspirate. Under the microscope, a pathologist looks for "blasts"—cells that have lost their way. Are the cells abnormally large? The Nucleus: Is the chromatin clumped or fine? The Clues: Presence of Auer rods or specific granules. 📍 Morphology provides the context , while Flow
Morphology can suggest a lineage, but it cannot always prove it. Two cells might look identical but behave like total strangers. The Molecular Fingerprint (Flow Cytometry) The Nucleus: Is the chromatin clumped or fine
As cells pass a laser beam, the machine reads their size (forward scatter) and internal complexity (side scatter).