Charcot Leyden crystal is from surnames of describers Jean-Martin Charcot and Ernst Viktor von Leyden. It composes of an eosinophilic lysophospholipase binding protein called Galectin -10. It is a microscopic crystal and observable under microscope in specimens like stool, sputum and pleural fluid of people who are in allergic and parasitic diseases.
It varies in size and may be up to 50 µm. It is slender and pointed at both ends as shown above picture.
It may appear in specimens like urine, sputum, stool and even some body fluid of patient having parasitic infection.
Charcot Leyden crystal is indicative of a disease involving eosinophilic inflammation or proliferation. Allergic reactions like asthma, bronchitis, allergic rhinitis and rhinosinusitis and also parasitic infections such as amoebiasis and hookworm infections.It is often seen pathologically in patients with bronchial asthma.
Notes: Pus cells, RBCs, and C L crystals in the pleural fluid under the microscope
Charcoat Leyden (CL) crystal in Stool Microscopy-