Aschoff body

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Aschoff body in Rheumatic Myocarditis
Aschoff body in Rheumatic Myocarditis

Aschoff bodies or Aschoff nodules are painless nodules present in rheumatic fever. It is an area of focal interstitial myocardial inflammation. Fully developed Aschoff bodies consist of fibrinoid change in connective tissue, lymphocytes, occasional plasma cells, and abnormal characteristic histiocytes. They are Aschoff cell granulomas with a fibrinoid necrotic centre found in the myocardium surrounding blood vessels, and other regions of the body. Myocytes in the myocardium can merge with the Aschoff cells to form giant cells of Aschoff, In addition, there are leukocytes, lymphocytes, eosinophils and plasma cells and Anitschkow myocytes. The Aschoff bodies were discovered independently by the German pathologist Ludwig Aschoff 1904 and one year later by Paul Rudolf Geipel.

Image link: http://erl.pathology.iupui.edu/C603/GENE426.HTM

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