No, Mast Cells are not granulocytes. The terms "granulocyte" and "agranulocyte" refer to circulation cells. Masts cells, though they have granules, are found in tissues- not the circulation.
no
Granulocyte is a white blood cell with secretory granules in its cytoplasm, e.g, an eosinophil or a basophil
mast cell is not a lymphocyte mast cell is not a professional phagocyte, but an occasional phagocyte
Neutrophil granulocytes or just Neutrophil is a white blood cell type of mammals. It has the smallest granule of all the granulocyte.
A band cell is a cell undergoing granulopoiesis, derived from a metamyelocyte, leading to a mature granulocyte.
Granulocyte is the medical term meaning granular cell.
"Gran" is a medical abbreviation for granulocyte, which is a type of white blood cell involved in the immune response to infection and inflammation.
I'm not sure which is the most commonly prescribed, but two mast cell stabilizers I know of are cromolyn and nedocromil.
Here are some: lymphocyte, leukocyte (=white blood cell), granulocyte, monocyte
t is immature granulocyte
The term that rhymes with blast is "mast." A mast cell is a type of white blood cell involved in the immune response.
Michel Fernex has written: 'The mast-cell system, its relationship to atherosclerosis, fibrosis and eoiinophils' -- subject(s): Mast cell disease, Mast cells