Anemia II Flashcards
Things you MUST know about hemoglobinopathies:
(large group that sickle cell falls under)
- Qualitative hemoglobin abnormality
- Sickle cell - most imp.
- Sickle cells –> hemolysis, faso-occlusion
Hemoglobinopathies:
- Structurally abnormal hemoglobin
- Often one amino acid away from normal!
- Best lab test: hemoglobin electrophoresis
- Most imp. one: sickle cell anemia
How does hemoglobin electrophoresis work?
- Pos. charged proteins move toward cathode
- Neg. charged proteins move toward anode
- Mixture starts in center
- Used to detect sickle-cell anemia and sickle-cell trait
What does Sickle-cell anemia, sickle-cell trait and normal show in hemoglobin electrophoresis?
Normal - HbA (more toward anode +)
Sickle-cell anemia - HbS (more toward cathode -)
Sickle-cell trait - HbS and HbA (both!)
What is the genetics of sickle-cell anemia?
The patient has a point mutation in beta chain (HbS) —>
Abnormal beta chains (substitution of valine for glutamate —> Nasty!
-Hemoglobin aggregates and polymerizes on deoxygenation
-Red cell becomes sickle shaped - clog up vessels and are fragile
What happens in capillaries of patients with sickle cell anemia?
- They will get ‘infarcted’ areas of their body where blood builds up/clogs
- Sickle cells get stuck in capillaries
What are the clinical findings in sickle cell anemia?
- Blacks (8% are heterozygous)
- Severity of disease is variable
- Chronic hemolysis
- Vaso-occlusive disease
- Inc. infections!
- –> sometimes due to autosplenectomy
- –> need spleen to take care of encapsulated organisms (these are very difficult to get rid of without a spleen)
What is autosplenectomy?
It occurs in sickle cell anemia.
- The RBCs cause little infarctions in the spleen which cause patches of fibrosis (bit of worthless fibrous tissue)
- Usually by your teenage years with the disease you don’t have a spleen anymore
What other physical symptoms are seen on hands and feet of people with sickle cell anemia?
Ulcers! Commonly show up on hands and feet with sickle cell disease
What five things are seen in a “post-splenectomy blood picture”?
- Nucleated red blood cells (if hemolysis and production of RBC is ramped up - spleen usually takes care of these but here it doesn’t because the spleen is damaged
- Targets (red cells that look just like targets)
- Howell-Jolly bodies (little remnants of nucleus that usually don’t get excluded normally)
- Pappenheimer bodies (aggregates of iron in the cell - removed by spleen)
- Inc. platelet count
How do you treat sickle cell anemia?
- Have patient avoid climbing mountains, stay hydrated, not fly in airplanes, etc. to avoid deoxygenating their blood
- Prevent triggers (everybody has their own particular set of triggers): infection, fever, dehydration, hypoxemia
- Vaccinate against encapsulated bugs
- –S. pneumoniae
- –H. influenzae - Blood transfusions - not always necessary
- Bone marrow transplantation - usually done in children
What do you need to know about thalassemia?
- Quantitative defect in hemoglobin
- Can’t make enough alpha or beta chains
- Variable disease severity
- Hypochromic, microcytic anemia with increased RBC and target cells
When does the gamma to beta hemoglobin switch happen?
Around a few months to a year of age
What is Hgb F?
Hemoglobin in fetus alpha2gamma2
What is Hgb A?
Dominant hemoglobin in adult alpha2beta2
Why is it better to have beta-thalassemia?
No other chain substitutes for alpha chains!
What genes are related to thalassemia?
- Normal globin genes
- –4 alpha genes (nothing you can substitute for alpha chains)
- –2 beta genes - Globin genes in thalassemia
- –alpha-thal: deletion of alpha-chain gene(s)
- –beta-thal: deletion of beta-chain gene(s) - Globin chains in thalassemia
- –alpha-thal: Dec. amount alpha chains
- –beta-thal: Dec. amount beta chains
What happens when the beta gene is defective?
Problem in beta-thalassemia: defective transcription, translation and processing of mRNA of beta-chain gene
- Severity of defect:
- –beta gene: normal gene
- –beta+ gene: produces some beta chains
- –beta0 gene: produces no beta chains
Genes in alpha-thalassemia:
Problem: alpha-chain genes are absent -Gene combinations in alpha-thalassemia: a/aa silent --/aa or -a/-a alpha-thal trait --/-a HbH disease --/-- Hydrops fetalis
What causes anemia in thalassemia?
- Alpha thalassemia
- Not enough alpha chains
- Excess unpaired beta, gamma or delta chains
- –Newborns have gamma4 tetrameters that stick together and then macrophages will try to eat the cells
- –Adults: beta4 tetramers (HbH) - Beta thalassemia
- Not enough beta chains
- Excess unpaired alpha chains
What is the morphology of thalassemia?
- Hypochromic, microcytic anemia (In iron deficiency, each new wave of red cells gets smaller, but in thalassemia this doesn’t happen. Iron stores are going down in other conditions but in thalassemia it will remain the same size)
- Depending on severity:
- –minimal anisocytosis (odd size) and poikilocytosis(odd shape), or
- –marked anisocytosis and poikilocytosis
- Target cells
- Basophilic stippling (little punctate blue dots through the cell)
- Some nucleated red cells in severe cases