Anaemia COPY Flashcards
What is anaemia
Reduction in the amount of haemoglobin in a given volume of blood below what would be expected in comparison with a healthy subject of the same age and gender
What in a FBC is reduced in anaemia
Hb
Usually RBC and Hct
What may anaemia be a result of
Reduction in the absolute amount of haemoglobin in the blood stream
Occasionally due to an increase in volume plasma (cannot persist as excess fluid is excreted)
What are the mechanisms of anaemia
Reduced production of red cells/haemoglobin in the bone marrow
Loss of blood from the body
Reduced survival of red cells in the circulation
Pooling of red cells in a very large spleen
What are the causes of microcytic anaemia
Defect in haem synthesis
- iron deficiency
- anaemia of chronic disease
Defect in global synthesis (thalassaemia)
- Defect in α chain synthesis
- Defect in β chain synthesis
Describe macrocytic anaemia
Average cell size is increased
Usually result from abnormal haemopoiesis
The red cell precursors continue to synthesise haemoglobin and other cellular proteins but fail to divide normally
May be due to premature release of cells from bone marrow (20% larger)
What is megaloblastic erythropoiesis
A cause of macrocytic anaemia
Delay in maturation of the nucleus while the cytoplasm continues to mature and the cell continues to grow
What is a megaloblast
Abnormal bone marrow erythroblast
Larger than normal and shows nuclei-cytoplasmic dissociation
What are the common causes of macrocytic anaemia
Megaloblastic anaemia as a result of lack of vitamin B12 or folic acid
Use of drugs interfering with DNA synthesis
Liver disease and ethanol toxicity
Recent major blood loss with adequate iron stores (increased reticulocytes)
Haemolytic anaemia (increased reticulocytes)
What are the mechanisms of normocytic anaemia
Recent blood loss
Failure of production of red cells
Pooling of red cells in the spleen
What are the causes of normocytic normochromic anaemia
Peptic ulcer, oesophageal varices, trauma
Failure of production of red cells
Hypersplenism e.g. portal cirrhosis
Describe haemolytic anaemia
Resulting from shortened survival of red cells in the circulation
May be due to intrinsic abnormality of the red cells or extrinsic factors acting on normal red cells
What is the difference between inherited and acquired haemolytic anaemia
Inherited - can result from abnormalities in the cell membrane, haemoglobin or enzymes in the red cell
Acquired - usually results from extrinsic factors such as micro-organisms, chemicals or drugs that damage the red cell
What is the difference between intravascular and extravascular haemolysis
Haemolysis is partly intravascular and partly extravascular
Intravascular - if there is very acute damage to the red cell
Extravascular - Defective red cells are removed by the spleen
Give examples of causes of inherited haemolytic anaemia
Cell membrane - Hereditary spherocytosis
Haemoglobin - Sickle cell
Glycolytic pathway - pyruvate kinase deficiency
Enzymes of pentose shunt - G6PD deficiency