clinical blood Flashcards
1
Q
describe anisocytosis
A
- blood abnormality where the red blood cells are of unequal sizes
- can signify anemia and thalassemia
2
Q
describe poikilocytosis
A
- poikilocytes are RBCs of distorted shape
- cause: membrane abnormalities or due to traumatic conditions
3
Q
describe iron deficinecy anemia
A
- type of microcytic anemia
- main case is lack of iron
- hypochrom: pale cytoplasm
- microcytic: small size of cells
- other types of anemia:
- hemolytic: defects in cell membranes cause rupture
- aplastic: destruction of bone marrow (radiation/toxins)
4
Q
describe pernicious anemia
A
- type of macrocytic anemia
- caused by lack of B12 absorption
5
Q
describe thalassemia
A
- hereditary hypochromic anemia resulting from decreased alpha or beta chains
- B-thalassemia indicates decreased or absent B chain
- excessive alpha chains produced in compensation are unable to form tetramers
- instead, they bind to the RBC membranes producing membrane damage and at high concentrations, toxic aggregates
6
Q
descibe hemolytic anemia-sickle cell anemia
A
- hydrophilic glutamic acid replaced by hydrophobic valine at point 6 in B-chain
- under reduced O2 saturation, erythrocytes undergo sickling
- sickled cells die in 10-20 days
- bone marrow unable to produce enough erythrocytes to keep pace with loss, resulting in anemia
7
Q
describe spherocytosis
A
- caused by variety of molecular defects in the genes that code for spectrin, ankyrin, band 3 and band 4 proteins
- results in a spherical shape of RBC rather than the biconcave shape