In a variety of tissues (lymph node and glandular stroma), mast cells have been found in close and often intimate association with macrophages containing numerous ferritin-like particles in their cytoplasm and within cytoplasmic vacuoles (siderosomes). Phagocytic vacuoles in a given macrophage differed markedly. Some contained abundant Prussian blue-reactive material and others contained periodic acid-Schiff reactive substance at the light microscope level, and ultrastructurally some were filled with ferritin particles and others were not. Ferritin-like particles have also been observed occasionally in the mast cells associated with macrophages and even within the matrix of some of the granules in these mast cells.

This content is only available as a PDF.
You do not currently have access to this content.