systemic mast cell disease - translation to arabic
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systemic mast cell disease - translation to arabic

GRANULATED CELL FOUND IN ALMOST ALL TISSUES
Mastocyte; Mast cells; Mast cell disease; Mastocytes; Labrocyte; Labrocytes; Mass cell; Mast Cell; Mast cell activation disorders; Mast cell activation disorder; Piecemeal degranulation; Anaphylactic degranulation
  • Illustration depicting mast cell activation and anaphylaxis
  • Structure of FcεR1 on mast cell. FcεR1 is a tetramer made of one alpha (α) chain, one beta (β) chain, and two gamma (γ) chains. IgE is binding to α chain, signal is transduced by ITAM motifs on β and γ chains.

systemic mast cell disease      
‎ داءُ الخَلاَيا البَدينَةِ المَجْموعِيّ‎
mast cell disease         
‎ داءُ الخَلاَيا البَدينَة‎
mast cells         
‎ خَلاَيا بَدِيْنَة‎

Definition

mast cell
¦ noun a cell found in connective tissue and releasing histamine and other substances during inflammatory and allergic reactions.
Origin
C19: mast from Ger. Mast 'fattening, feeding'.

Wikipedia

Mast cell

A mast cell (also known as a mastocyte or a labrocyte) is a resident cell of connective tissue that contains many granules rich in histamine and heparin. Specifically, it is a type of granulocyte derived from the myeloid stem cell that is a part of the immune and neuroimmune systems. Mast cells were discovered by Paul Ehrlich in 1877. Although best known for their role in allergy and anaphylaxis, mast cells play an important protective role as well, being intimately involved in wound healing, angiogenesis, immune tolerance, defense against pathogens, and vascular permeability in brain tumours.

The mast cell is very similar in both appearance and function to the basophil, another type of white blood cell. Although mast cells were once thought to be tissue-resident basophils, it has been shown that the two cells develop from different hematopoietic lineages and thus cannot be the same cells.