This smear is from a patient with hereditary spherocytosis. Note the dense microspherocytes with absent central pallor. Because of an inherited abnormality in structural red cell membrane proteins, the red cell sheds microparticles such that the membrane loses surface area. The result is that the red cell can no longer maintain its biconcave disc shape and becomes more spherocytic, a shape that jeopardizes passage of affected RBCs from the splenic cords into the sinuses.FIG1 

Stanley Schrier, Stanford University School of Medicine

Stanley Schrier, Stanford University School of Medicine

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The above image was first published in the ASH IMAGE BANK, a reference and teaching tool that is continually updated with new atlas images and images of case studies. For more information or to contribute to the Image Bank, visit www.ashimagebank.org.

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