Erythron Flashcards

1
Q

S

Clinical Pathology

A

subspecialty of pathology that uses primairly antemortem lab tests for diagnosis + management of disease
- CBC (whole blood)
- clinical chemistry (serum or plasma)
- UA
- coagulation testing
- endocrine testing
- fluid analysis
- cytology
- more

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2
Q

Hematology

A

study of physiology of blood

Blood = erythrocytes (RBCs) + leukocytes (WBCs) + platelets + plasma

Blood = 55% plasma + 45% cells (mostly erythrocytes)

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3
Q

Erythron + Function

A

circulating erythrocytes + erythopoietic cells in bone marrow

main function is to transport oxygen by using Hb

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4
Q

Normal Mammal RBC Shape

A

biconcave disc (discocyte)

  • shape allows substantial deformability while travelin vessels
  • central pallor where cell is thinnest

pallor most prominent in dogs
smaller RBCs have less prominent pallor

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5
Q

Normal avian/reptile/amphibian RBC shape:

A

oval/elliptical nucleated erythrocytes

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6
Q

Hemoglobin (Hgb)

A

tetrameric metalloprotein consisting of 4 heme + 4 globin mol.
- each globin contains heme moiety
- each moeity contains iron atom in 2+ valence state

oxygen binds to Fe2+ allowing 1 Hgb to transport 4 O2 molecules
- each RBC contains millions of Hgb

acts as pH buffer + carries some CO2 back to lungs from tissue

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7
Q

O2 Affinity for Hgb influenced by:

A
  • body temp
  • blood pH + CO2
  • RBC conc.
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8
Q

Methemoglobin

A

if Fe2+ (ferrous) is oxidized to Fe3+ (ferric) 🡒
- Hb 🡒 methemoglobin
- O2 carrying capacity severely reduced/negated

Results in:
- cyanosis
- methemoglobinemia

secondary to certain toxicities + rare genetic anomalies

classic case = acetominophen toxicity in cats

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9
Q

Erythrocyte Metabolism

A

Mature mammalian RBCs lack:
- nuclei
- mitochondria

therefore mature RBC produces ATP + NADH thru aneorobic glycolysis
- glucose major energy source

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10
Q

Blood Cell Production

Hematopoiesis v Extramedullary v Erythropoiesis

A

Hematopoiesis:
- production of RBCs + WBCs + platelets within bone marrow

Extramedullary Hematopoiesis:
- production of blood cells outside of bone marrow
- spleen, liver, adrenals, lymph nodes, etc

Erythropoiesis:
- production of erythrocytes

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11
Q

Erythropoiesis

A

erythroid precursors lineage:
- rubriblast 🡒 prorubricyte 🡒 rubricyte 🡒 metarubricyte 🡒 reticulocyte 🡒 mature erythrocite

rubriblast:
- 1st vissually discernable precursor

pluripotential + multipotential stem cells:
- self-renewing or differentiate into progenitor cells

Progenitor Cells:
- maintly differentiate into precursor cells

approx. 5 days from progenitor cell stimulation to release of reticulocytes into peripheral blood

differentiation controlled by many factors such as EPO, etc.

from rubriblasts, 3-5 divisions result in 8-32 differentiated cells

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12
Q

Regulation of Erythropoiesis

A

Erythropoietin (EPO)
- key regulator
- most produced by kidney + some by liver
- blocks apoptosis of certain precursors
- 🡑 Hgb synthesis

Others:
- cytokines
- hormones

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13
Q

Regenerative Response

A
  • Bone marrow response to correct 🡓 in erythrocyte mass
  • potential for shortened time to maturation (~3-5 days)

presence reticulocytes in circulation
- not expected in horses
- mild/absent in ruminants

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14
Q

Rate of Erythropoiesis

A
  • normal = steady to match removal of aged RBCs
  • anemic = abnormal 🡓 in RBCs

in response to some types of anemia, systemic mechanisms upregulate erythropoiesis
- primarily, anemoa d/t blood loss or erythrocyte destruction

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15
Q

Clinical implications of RBC lifespan

A
  • often related to presence of polychromasia/reticulocytosis in health
  • can contribute to development of anemia in disease
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16
Q

Removal of Senescent RBCs

A

MAJOR route of removal:
- Extravascular hemolysis = phagocytosis by macrophages within spleen (MPS)

MINOR route of removal:
- Intravascular hemolysis = spontaneous rupture of RBCs while in circulation
- free Hgb released into plasma

MPS = mononuclear phagocytic system