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  2. Pappenheimer bodies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pappenheimer_bodies

    Pappenheimer bodies (Peripheral Blood / May-Grünwald Giemsa and Prussian blue stain) Pappenheimer bodies are abnormal basophilic granules of iron found inside red blood cells on routine blood stain. [1] They are a type of inclusion body composed of ferritin aggregates, or mitochondria or phagosomes containing aggregated ferritin. They appear ...

  3. Pappenheimer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pappenheimer

    Pappenheimer may refer to: the regiment of cuirassiers led by Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim; the Pappenheimer rapier; a member of the noble house of ...

  4. Pappenheimer witch trial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pappenheimer_witch_trial

    The Pappenheimer Case centered around a family who were tried and executed for witchcraft in 1600 in Munich, Bavaria, Germany.The family were executed, along with accomplices they were forced to name under torture, after a show trial as scapegoats for a number of unsolved crimes committed years back in a display of extreme torture intended to deter the public from crime. [1]

  5. Inclusion bodies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inclusion_bodies

    Inclusion bodies have a non-unit (single) lipid membrane [citation needed].Protein inclusion bodies are classically thought to contain misfolded protein.However, this has been contested, as green fluorescent protein will sometimes fluoresce in inclusion bodies, which indicates some resemblance of the native structure and researchers have recovered folded protein from inclusion bodies.

  6. Döhle bodies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Döhle_bodies

    Döhle bodies are light blue-gray, oval, basophilic, leukocyte inclusions located in the peripheral cytoplasm of neutrophils. They measure 1–3 μm in diameter. They measure 1–3 μm in diameter. Not much is known about their formation, but they are thought to be remnants of the rough endoplasmic reticulum .

  7. Talk:Pappenheimer bodies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Pappenheimer_bodies

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  8. The forensic scientist said the results showed the soil was “much more likely” to have come from the same location as the sample in van, and ranked as “odds 100 times to 10,000 times more ...

  9. University of Tennessee Anthropological Research Facility

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Tennessee...

    The University of Tennessee Anthropological Research Facility, better known as the Body Farm and sometimes seen as the Forensic Anthropology Facility, [2] was conceived in 1971 and established in 1972 by anthropologist William M. Bass as the first facility for the study of decomposition of human remains. [3]