Schüffner's dots

Trophozoites of P. ovale in thin blood smears. Schüffner's dots can be seen.

Schüffner's dots refers to a hematological finding that is associated with malaria,[1] exclusively found in infections caused by Plasmodium ovale or Plasmodium vivax.[2]

Plasmodium vivax induces morphologic alterations in infected host erythrocytes that are visible by light microscopy in Romanowsky-stained blood smears as multiple brick-red dots. These morphologic changes, referred to as Schüffner's dots, are important in the identification of this species of malarial parasite and have been associated by electron microscopy with caveolavesicle complexes along the erythrocyte plasmalemma.[3]

They are named for Wilhelm Schüffner, who described them in 1904.[4]

References

  1. "Royal Perth Hospital - Malaria Diagnosis".
  2. "Microscopy of Plasmodium species".
  3. Udagama, P. V.; Atkinson, C. T.; Peiris, J. S.; David, P. H.; Mendis, K. N.; Aikawa, M. (1988). "Immunoelectron microscopy of Schüffner's dots in Plasmodium vivax-infected human erythrocytes". The American Journal of Pathology. 131 (1): 48–52. PMC 1880566. PMID 3281470.
  4. "Schuffner's+dots - Definition from Merriam-Webster's Medical Dictionary".


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