cowdry bodies
Cowdry bodies are eosinophilic or basophilic neuronal intranuclear inclusions composed of nucleic acid and protein, this cytopathic changes are considered a hallmark of viral infection..
Pathology
Cowdry bodies are in fact fixation artifacts and not directly the result of the intracellular virus. There are two types of intranuclear Cowdry bodies:
- Type A: acidophilic material of droplet-like masses surrounded by clear halos within nuclei., seen in gingivostomatitis and conjunctivitis caused by Herpes simplex virus and also chicken pox caused by varicella zoster.
- Type B intranuclear eosinophilic without any nuclear change, seen in infection with poliovirus and CMV.
History.
Cowdry bodies are named after the Canadian-American biologist Edmund Vincent Cowdry Ph.D., 1888-1975