1.4 Approach to Anaemia Flashcards
What are possible causes of microcytic/ hypochromic anaemia?
iron deficiency, thalassemia, ACD
causes of normochromic/ normocytic anaemia?
acute blood, renal anaemia, marrow infiltration
causes of macrocytic, high MC anaemia
B12/ folate deficiency, drugs, hypothyroidism, liver, drugs; reticulocytes
RBC measurements
- Haemoglobin (Hb) – directly measured as the ____________________
- MCV (mean corpuscular volume) – individual RBC volumes are directly measured as individual red blood cells passes through an aperture as the degree of _________________________ across the aperture
o Average of RBC volumes
- RBC (red blood cell count) – directly measured as a fixed volume of blood is aspirated by the _____________ and the number of RBCs passing through an aperture is counted
- Haematocrit – % of blood volume made up by RBCs, derived from ______________
- MCH (mean corpuscular haemoglobin) – average amount of haemoglobin in a RBC, derived from _________________
- MCHC (mean corpuscular haemoglobin concentration) – average haemoglobin concentration of an RBC
o Derived from _________________ (which is derived from MCV and RBC)
amount of light absorbed at a particular wavelength;
interruption of an electrical field;
automated counter;
MCV and RBC;
Hb and RBC;
Hb and haematocrit
Red cell distribution width (RDW) – frequency distribution of sizes of red blood cells in a person’s blood sample, a normal distribution
- Measure of the range of variation of RBC volume – variability as shown by standard deviations
- RDW is a measure of ___________ – increases with increasing _____________________
- Even if the standard deviation of red blood cells remain constant, RDW can increase due to microcytosis
anisocytosis;
variability of RBC sizes
how to differentiate iron deficiency anaemia from thalassaemia trait based on
- MCV
- RDW-CV
- red cell count
- peripheral blood smear
iron deficiency anaemia
- MCV: decreased
- RDW- CV: increased
- red cell count: decreased (red cells with variable degrees of iron produced at different times, resulting in variable cell size; lifespan is 120 days)
- peripheral blood smear: hypochromic elliptocytes
Thalassaemia trait
- MCV: decreased
- RDW- CV: increased or normal (mildly increased because of low MCV which is the denominator in the equation)
- blood sphere: target cells (not specific)
microspherocytes are seen in?
Immune haemolysis or hereditary spherocytosis: smaller cell with no central pallor, indicative of loss of bioconcave shape
blister cells are seen in?
oxidative haemolysis in G6PD deficiency, oxidised areas of RBCs are removed by splenic macrophages
schistocytes (fragmented cells) are seen in?
microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia (red cells squeezed through arterioles and small vessels that are partially blcoked by clots or other microscopic emboli)