Term
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Definition
the entire circulating red cell mass, anemia is when this mass is decreased |
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Term
what are the primary causes of anemia? |
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Definition
primary bone marrow disorders, susbstrate deficiency (no iron, protein)accelerated loss or destruction (bleeding or destroying), decreased erythropoietin (protein synthesized by distal peri-tubular cells in kindy, encoded on chr 7) |
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Term
what are the general steps of erythropoiesis? |
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Definition
kidney senses hypoxia on RBCs, stimulates production of erythropoietin, bone marrow is stimulated to produce more RBC, increased RBCs eliminate hypoxia, erythropoietin levels return to normal. |
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|
Term
can erythropoietin be synthesized and administered to pts? |
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Definition
yes, but if a kidney is damaged - it has to be replaced |
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Term
what are normal Hgb levels for a male? female? |
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Definition
males: 14-26, females: 12-15 (male androgen are the reason their count is higher. menstruation doesn't really factor in.) |
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Term
what does a CBC (complete blood count) assess? |
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Definition
RBC, Hgb, Hct, MCV, MCH, MCHC, RDW, WBC, platelet count, PDW, and PCV |
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Term
what should the RBC be in a CBC? |
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Definition
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|
Term
what is the ratio of RBC to Hgb to Hct (hematocrit - % RBC in bloodstream)? |
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Definition
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Term
what is MCV and what should it be in a CBC? |
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Definition
the mean corpuscular volume (how big cells are), should be generally 80-100. low: microcytic, high: macrocytic |
|
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Term
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Definition
mean corpuscular hemoglobin - amount of Hgb per cell |
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Term
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Definition
the mean corpuscular hemoglobin conc - Hgb per hematocrit. low: hypochromic, high: hyperchromic. this is useful in determining spherocytosis (MCHC is high) |
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|
Term
what is RDW? what should it be in a CBD? |
|
Definition
red cell distribution width; variation in cell size - the greater the number, the greater the variation. 12-14 is normal |
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Term
what should the WBC be in a CBC? is there any racial variation? |
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Definition
5-10,000. african-americans tend to have a lower values here than caucasians |
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|
Term
what should the platelet count be in a CBC? |
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Definition
between 150,000 and 450,000. this is an acute phase reactant that will go up and down |
|
|
Term
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Definition
PDW - platelet distrobution width (same as RBC, but for platelets), PCV - same same as MCV, but for platelets |
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Term
how are RBCs affected by pregnancy? |
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Definition
more iron is needed everyday. RBC mass will increase to respond to higher O2 need. RBC volume will then increase and plasma volume increases even more than RBC mass. they appear to have a lower Hgb b/c of this higher volume |
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Term
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Definition
the last step before a cell becomes a RBC. |
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Term
how long to RBCs last? what is the turnover rate? |
|
Definition
120 days, the turnover rate is .8%/day so everyday ~ 1% of RBCs will die and be replaced. |
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Term
what does a reticulocyte count tell you? |
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Definition
how many RBCs are being made; low:hypo-/high: hyperproliferative |
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Term
how is a reticulocyte count performed? |
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Definition
a blood smear is stained for reticulum, and a ratio is taken out of 1000. the value is expressed as a % - but is not indicative of other cell levels, so it only useful comparatively rather than as an individual value |
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Term
what is an absolute retic count? |
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Definition
the retic count is multiplied by the RBC value, this will give you the # of retics |
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Term
what is an absolute corrected retic count? |
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Definition
retic counts take 4 days to develop (3 days in the bone marrow, 1 day in the periphery). for each 10 pt drop in hematocrit, retics spend an extra 1/2 day in the periphery (bone marrow kicks out retics faster in anemia). so to correct for this 1/2 day, the absolute retic number is divided by the # of days in the periphery. so assuming a hct of 45 is normal, if you have 35 you divide by 1.5, if you have 25, you divide by 2, if you have 15, you divide by 2.5 etc. this will show anemics having lower retic values that previously, which is the actual representation of what is going on in the body b/c the retics are being pushed out faster than normal |
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|
Term
what should the absolute retic count be? would this go up if a pt is anemic? |
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Definition
between 25-75,000. this will rise in anemia (body is trying to compensate) |
|
|
Term
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Definition
the same thing as an absoulte retic count, but just expressed as a ratio where 1 is normal (higher is good, lower is bad). the hematocrit is divided by 45 and multiplied by the retic % from the lab ( %x(hct/45)) |
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|
Term
what are reasons for a low reticulocyte count? |
|
Definition
the bone marrow is not responsive due to: aplasia (no cells in bone marrow - seen w/leukemia), bone marrow suppression (drugs/alcohol, viruses can do this), dysplasia (abnormal cells, seen in myelodysplastic syndromes - cells may live for shorter amounts of time) |
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Term
what should be considered if a pt's retic count is normal? |
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Definition
their Hgb. if this is normal as well, everything's good - but if it is low, the person is likely severely anemic |
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Term
what does a high retic count mean? |
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Definition
the body has recognized anemia and is trying to compensate (erythropoietin is not usually necessary if pt is young and healthy). if a person is still anemic with a high retic count, you have to determin if they are bleeding or destroying RBCs |
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Term
what do retics look like? |
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Definition
they are larger than RBCs, and tend to have a grey hue, and have to be specifically stained for otherwise the best assessment that can be made in terms of which cells are retics is that some cells have polychromasia (many colors, when this is noted a retic count is ordered) |
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|
Term
how is anemia classified? |
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Definition
usually first according to size. microcytic (less than 6 microns or MCV is less than 80), macrocytic (greater than 9 microns or MCV greater than 100). normocytic is everything inbetween |
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|
Term
what are some differentials for microcytic anemia? |
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Definition
iron deficiency, thalassemia, sideroblastic anemia, lead/heavy metal, things that affect Hgb synthesis, anemia chronic disease (chronic inflammatory state) |
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Term
what do RBCs affected by microcytic anemia appear in terms of size? color? |
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Definition
RBC should be the same size as the nucleus of a small lymphocyte. the white central pallor of a RBC should be 1/3 the diameter, if it is any greater - hypochromic |
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|
Term
what is seen in terms of platelets in anemia? |
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Definition
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|
Term
what are common clinical presentations for anemia? |
|
Definition
tired, no energy, heart racing, shortness of breath. rarer: coiling of nails (koilonychia), like to eat ice/red clay, glossitis (smooth painful tongue), angular stomatitis (sores on corner of mouth), postcricoid esophageal web/stricture, pallor, heart palpiptations, tinnitus (more pounding), headaches, irritability, weakness/dizziness/easily fatigued |
|
|
Term
when do anemics start showing symptoms? |
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Definition
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|
Term
why is iron deficiency uncommon w/the western diet? |
|
Definition
avg iron requirement is ~1 mg/day and the avg western iron intake is 16 mg/day. this is not usually a problem unless the pt is bleeding or a strict vegan |
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|
Term
what are normal lab values for iron? |
|
Definition
marrow iron stores: 2-3, transferrin: 330, ferritin: 100, iron 100-500 |
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|
Term
how do iron lab values change when you first start to loose blood? what about if blood loss continues? if it continues even more? |
|
Definition
serum iron level will temporarily dip, iron stores will drop, transferrin will stay the same, plasma ferritin stores will go down, and plasma iron will be a little low. marrow iron stores will be used up, transferrin increases, plasma ferritin drops, and plasma iron is lower. if blood loss keeps continuing: no iron stores, high transferrin, low ferritin, low plasma iron - this is the iron deficient state |
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|
Term
what is the $/iron analogy? |
|
Definition
ferritin: bank account, transferrin (iron binding capacity): credit card, pocket money: plasma/serum iron |
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|
Term
what is the first thing you fix in iron deficient anemia? |
|
Definition
the last thing that went wrong. this is the progression: anemia fixed, serum iron fixed, then transferrin, ferritin. (when you replace someone’s iron you shouldn’t stop when anemia goes away – hemoglobin will be normalized, but you’ll still have no iron stores – if you stop giving iron then they will go right back to where they were) |
|
|
Term
how is iron administered? what is its half life? what else needs to be done beyond administration of iron in deficiency? |
|
Definition
3x/day (unless the pt cannot tolerate it). iron has an infinite t 1/2. whatever is causing the deficiency needs to be determined. |
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|
Term
what are lab results consistent with iron deficiency? |
|
Definition
MCV less than 80 (microcytic), high RDW, hypochromic, low ferritin/transferrin/serum iron levels, genetic/electrophoretic evidence of thalassemia (defect in hgb chain) |
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|
Term
what is the mentzer index? |
|
Definition
MCV/RBC. if less then 30 = thalassemic, if greater than 14 = iron deficiency (not dx, but suspicious) |
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|
Term
what are other causes than bleeding (main cause in US) for iron deficiency? |
|
Definition
hemoptysis (coughing up blood), epistaxis (nosebleeds), blood donation, malabsorption (GI sx, intestinal malabsorption), GI bleeds, and pregnancy |
|
|
Term
what needs to be ruled out with anemic older pts? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what kinds of GI bleeds can cause anemia? |
|
Definition
GI bleeding (tumors/oesophageal varices, hemorrhoids, AVM, gastritis, duoenitis, peptic ulcers), GU bleeding (bladder tumor), GYN bleeding (ask about tampon #/period frequency), helminthic infections (hookworm, schistosoma, trichuris) |
|
|
Term
how is iron deficiency treated? how long do you treat? |
|
Definition
stop the cause of bleeding, supplement with iron (oral (best), IM (Z tract injection and lills muscle), IV via iron dextran (possible allergy), sucrose, or gluconate). **treatment is until the iron stores are better. |
|
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Term
|
Definition
beta chain thalassemia is a defect w/2 genes on chr 11 and is common w/mediterranean, african and middle easterners. alpha thalassemia is a problem w/4 genes on chr 16 and is seen in SE asian and middle eastern pts. (hgb is 4 proteins wrapped around an iron molecule, 2 alpha/2 beta) |
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|
Term
what are the types of beta thalassemia? |
|
Definition
minor/heterozygotic: beta production is about 1/2 normal. major/homozygotic: beta0 (naught) – makes no beta chains or more commonly, beta+ – makes some beta chains – 5 to 40% |
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|
Term
what are the types of hemoglobin? |
|
Definition
A: alpha2beta2(normal), A2: alpha2delta2, F: alpha2gamma2, H:beta4, and barts: gamma4 |
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|
Term
how do pts with beta thalassemia generally present? |
|
Definition
usually asymptomatic, but they can have a massive proliferation of bone marrow causing skeletal deformities w/major thalassemia. they will need bone marrow transplants due to iron overload (blood transfusions caused iron overload) |
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|
Term
what is seen on an x-ray for pts w/beta thalasemia? |
|
Definition
"hair on end appearance" due to hyperproliferation of marrow |
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|
Term
what does the mentzer index *usually show in cases of beta thalassemia? RDW? hgb/RBC? |
|
Definition
a mentzer index (MCV/rbc) count of less than 13 favors thalassemia. RDW is normal - cells tend to be the same size. if in the RBC/Hgb/Hct ratio of 1:3:9 ratio you see <3, thalassemia is suspicious |
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|
Term
how does beta thalassemia appear on a lab smear? |
|
Definition
codocytes (target cells) are visible |
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|
Term
what will be low in beta thalassemia? what will this cause? |
|
Definition
hemoglobin A, which will lead to hypochromic cells and a massive decrease in mature RBC production |
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|
Term
what will there be more of in beta thalassemia? what can happen w/these? |
|
Definition
alpha chains (due to lack of beta chains to pair up w/), which can cause inclusion bodies in red cell precursors and eventually kill them, so the spleen has to get rid of these leading to hypersplenomegaly -> may cause jaundice/gall stones |
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|
Term
what can beta thalasemia possibly lead to? |
|
Definition
profound anemia, heart failure, infections, tissue becoming hypoxic, increased erythropoietin, massive expansion of bone marrow (hair on end appearance), GI problems, and deformities |
|
|
Term
why is alpha thalassemia more complicated than beta? |
|
Definition
b/c it involves 4 genes rather than 2. |
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|
Term
what happens if a pt with alpha thalassemia has 1 gene deletion? 2? |
|
Definition
1 gene deletion: is called alpha thal 2 trait, and people are usually fine (xa/aa). 2 gene deletion: is called alpha thal 1 trait cis if same chr (mediterranean/asian) (xx/aa) OR alpha thal 1 trait trans if different chr (african) (xa/xa) |
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|
Term
what happens if a pt with alpha thalassemia has 3 gene deletiona? 4? |
|
Definition
3 alpha hgb chain gene deletions is called hgb H disease, and there is a increase of left over B chains. all 4 gene deletion = hydrops fetalis, infants will be born dead |
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|
Term
what are possible outcomes for a child born to to alpha thal 1 trait cis parents? |
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Definition
50% chance child will be alpha thal 1 trait cis also, 25% chance they will be normal and 25% chance of hydrops fetalis |
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|
Term
what will a child be from 2 alpha thal 1 trait trans parents? |
|
Definition
100% probability they will be alpha thal 1 trait trans as well |
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|
Term
what is therapy for thalassemia pts? |
|
Definition
genetic counseling (esp for alpha thal 1 trait cis), transfusions/bone marrow transplants for beta thalassemia major, and for alpha thalassemia types with 1 or 2 deletions no tx, for pts with 3 deletions - possible splenectomy/transfusion |
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|
Term
why must iron deficiency be differentiated from thalassemia? |
|
Definition
the body doesn't have a mechanism to get rid of iron. if a pt with thalassemia is treated with iron, they will not improve and iron overload can eventually destroy the liver/pancreas. (people should respond to iron within wk/mos) |
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|
Term
do american adults typically need iron supplements? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what kinds of anemia might present as normocytic? |
|
Definition
iron deficiency (after a massive bleed and not enough time has passed to make microcytic cells), anemia chronic disease (chronic inflammatory state), anemia of renal failure (kidneys don't work and erythropoietin goes down), marrow failure (marrow is slow/doesn't make enough) |
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|
Term
what is seen in lab results for iron deficiency? |
|
Definition
RDW increases first due to an intial brisk reticulocytosis, early hemorrhage (which is why microcytic indexs aren't necessarily seen) and later developing anemia |
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|
Term
what is seen clinically for iron deficiency? |
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Definition
malaise, pallor, palpitations, ringing in the ears, headache, irritability, weakness, dizziness, etc |
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|
Term
what is the pathophysiology of anemia of chronic disease (ACD)? |
|
Definition
cytokines and free radicals damage erythroid precursors causing a disorder of iron hemostasis (not released from ferritin (synthesis of which is also increased) and not incorporated into RBC as readily) |
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|
Term
what do cytokines IFN gamma, LPS, IL-10, and TNF-alpha do in ACD? |
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Definition
IFN gamma, LPS, and TNF-alpha all upregulate DMT1 (divalent metal transporter 1) which is responsible for transmembrane import of ferrous iron - this increases the uptake of iron into macrophages. these cytokines also down-regulate ferroportin which blocks release of iron from cells through the transmembranous iron transporter. IL-10 stimulates transferrin mediated acquisition of iron by macrophages |
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|
Term
what is hepcidin? how is it involved with ACD? what will high hepcidin in mice cause? |
|
Definition
hepcidin is an iron-regulating acute phase reactant that is induced by LPS/IL-6 and is inhibited by TNF-alpha. this diverts iron traffic through the duodenoum and inhibits release of iron from macrophages. high hepcidin in mice will cause iron deficiency anemia. |
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|
Term
how does IL-6 play a part in ACD? |
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Definition
IL-6 induces hypoferremia |
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|
Term
what is the difference between iron deficient anemia and ACD? |
|
Definition
in ACD: IL-1, interferon alpha, interferon beta, interferon gamma, TNF alpha all down regulate erythropoietin receptors - if you have decreased receptors have decreased responsiveness to erythropoietin, therefore decreased red cell production. in ACD: transferrin receptors will be low, ferritin will be high, and iron binding capacity will be low |
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|
Term
what should be looked for *first clinically in terms of ACD? |
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Definition
look for signs of underlying chronic inflammatory disease: RA, acute/chronic infections, CA, SLE, vasculitis, sarcoid, IBD |
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|
Term
what is seen on lab results for pt wih ACD? |
|
Definition
usually mild anemia, hgb ~9.5, a little fatigue, low retic count, low iron, low iron sat, low to normal IBC, high ferritin (different than iron deficiency anemia), normal or low transferrin receptors |
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|
Term
what is the treatment for pts with ACD if the underlying chronic disease cannot be treated? |
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Definition
iron and erythropoietin supplementation |
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|
Term
what are the stages of chronic kidney disease? |
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Definition
90ml/min is stage one, divide in half down to stage five |
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|
Term
what happens in terms of anemia w/renal failure? |
|
Definition
impaired erythropoietin and subsequent decreased rbc production as well as uremic toxins that impair proliferation of erythroid precursors (spermine, PTH, and ribonuclease). these problems are treated with erythropoietin and dialysis respectively. |
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|
Term
how do pts with anemia due to renal failure present? |
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Definition
usually fine - symptoms of renal failure will present before the symptoms of anemia |
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|
Term
what is seen in terms of lab results with renal failure related anemia? |
|
Definition
serum creatinine (mostly cleared by filtration), GFP (glomerular filtration rate assessed w/cockoff gault formula, graded 1-5), serum erythropoietin, (semi log curve - more anemic = higher erythrpoietin) |
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|
Term
how is anemia due to renal failure treated? |
|
Definition
erythropoietin/dialysis, renal transplant or repair |
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|
Term
what happens with bone marrow failure? what is this associated with? |
|
Definition
the bone marrow can no longer make retics and may show pure red aplasia which is associated with malignant thymomas. it may also show complete aplasia, where nothing in the bone marrow will work and dacrocytes (misshapen tennis racket cells) will also be visible. |
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|
Term
what is falconi's anemia (aplastic)? how is it tested for? |
|
Definition
an autosomal recessive aplastic disease due to defects in the DNA excision repair pathway. these pts are unable to remove ROSes. it can be dxed with a bone marrow bx. |
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|
Term
what are clinical features of pts with fanconi's anemia? |
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Definition
skin pigment changes, short stature, upper limb abnormaility, hypogonadism (male), skeletal changes, eye abnormalities, kidney malfunction, ear anomaly with deafness, and GI/heart abnormalities |
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|
Term
what are lab results consistent with fanconi's anemia? |
|
Definition
bone marrow failure; first manifested by thrombocytopenia and last by a decrease in hematopoietic lineages. granulocytopenia is also seen along with chromosomal fragility, (chromatid breaks, rearrangements gaps etc) |
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|
Term
what is the treatment for fanconi's anemia? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
what is the treatment for marrow failure if it is an immune related failure? |
|
Definition
immune therapy; ATG, cyclosporine A, and a bone marrow transplant |
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|
Term
if a pt has macrocytic anemia, what should be on the differential? |
|
Definition
*alcohol*, *B12 deficiency*, *folic acid deficiency*, drugs (that interfere w/folic acid), liver disease (misincorporation of cholesterol into RBCs), hypothyroidism (sluggish), reticulcytosis (too many retics - machine thinks they are large RBCs), myelodysplasia (damaged bone marrow) |
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|
Term
what tests should be done to dx macrocytic anemia? |
|
Definition
get B12, folic acid levels (both serum (gives immediate level) and RBC (shows more long term level)), peripheral smear to check for large, hyper segmented neutrophils (due to abnormal DNA b/c of lack of folic acid for DNA repair), thyroid function tests to make sure not hypothyroid, liver function test to make sure liver isn't shutting down, and bone marrow bx |
|
|
Term
where does folic acid come from? |
|
Definition
green leafy vegetables (folia - latin for leaves) |
|
|
Term
how do pts with a B12/folate deficiency present? |
|
Definition
pallor w/yellow tint (sallow), premature greying, pigmentation of skin increases/nail beds, mask like faces (folate), beefy red tongue, and neurologic signs (posterior while columns - proprioception/vibrioception) |
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|
Term
what is seen clinically with B12/folate deficiency? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what is pernicious anemia? |
|
Definition
anti intrinsic factor/antiparietal cell antibodies that block the absorption of B12 |
|
|
Term
how is pernicious anemia tested for? |
|
Definition
anti-intrinsic factor/anti-parietal cell antibodies are tested for |
|
|
Term
how are B12 and folate deficiencies treated? |
|
Definition
B12/folate are administered orally or via IV/IM/nasal (shots are 1x/mo) |
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|
Term
what are the 2 possible reasons hemolytic anemia? |
|
Definition
immune or intrinsic/extrinsic factors |
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|
Term
how does the immune system cause hemolytic anemia? how is this tested for? |
|
Definition
the body can make antibodies that attack RBCs and coombs test is for this. the coombs test checks RBCs for antibody, and the indirect coombs test checks the serum for antibody. warm antibodies are IgG/cold are IgM & C3. microspherocytes are also seen b/c the spleen chops off the antibody, and with it some of the membrane = leaving smaller sphere RBCs that have lost their biconcave shape. |
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|
Term
can hemolytic anemia be intra or extravascular? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
what could be responsible for extrinsic hemolytic anemia? |
|
Definition
waring blender syndrome which is an abnormal heart valve, a kesselbach merrit AV shunt, DIC (fibrin strands cutting RBCs into schistocytes - microangoipathic), and membrane problems (spherocytosis/elliptocytosis) can all lead to hemolytic anemia |
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|
Term
what are intrinsic problems that can cause hemolytic anemia? |
|
Definition
hemoglobin problems (sickle cell and hgb C), enzyme problems (G6PD deficiency - this makes NADP into NADPH, without which you get oxidative stress) |
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|
Term
what is G6PD seen in? what can cause the exacerbating oxidative stree? |
|
Definition
african americans, oxidative stress can come from: infection, sulfa drugs, and fava beans |
|
|
Term
how does hemolytic anemia present clinically? |
|
Definition
jaundice (scleral icterus/intravascular), splenomegaly, and pallor, fatigue etc |
|
|
Term
what lab results are consistent with hemolytic anemia? |
|
Definition
bilirubin (what hemoglobin is broken down into, indirect is usually higher than direct), haptoglobin levels drop (b/c they bind globin portion of hgb), LDH levels will be high intracellularly, and hemodesiderin (metabolized hgb) will be found in urine |
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|
Term
what is tx for hemolytic anemia? |
|
Definition
treat underlying cause (could be abnormal heart valve, AV malfunction, DIC), mediate immune system with steroids, avoid drugs that cause enzyme problems (like w/G6PD), -> treat rapidly |
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