Haematology 1 - Systemic disease Flashcards
Which factors do proteins C and S inhibit?
Factors V and VIII
Laboratory findings in IDA
Microcytic, hypochromic, reduced ferritin and transferrin saturation, raised TIBC and transferrin
Leucoerythroblastic anaemia blood film features
Nucleated RBCs, immature myeloid cells, poikilocytes and anisocytes (tear drop poikilocytes)
Causes of a leucoerythroblastic film
BM malignancy, haematological malignancy (leukaemia/lymphoma/myeloma), myelofibrosis, severe infection e.g. miliary TB, fungal infection
Antibodies in warm and cold AIHA and their respective places of haemolysis
Warm = IgG, extravascular haemolysis Cold = IgM, intravascular haemolysis
Worlwide commonest cause of non-immune mediated haemolytic anaemia?
Malaria
Some causes of MAHA
HUS, TTP, DIC, Pre-eclampsia, Adenocarcinoma
Treatment for TTP and HUS
PLASMA EXCHANGE, NOT STEROIDS
How do adenocarcinomas cause MAHA?
They cause a low-grade DIC by releasing procoagulant factors and granules in to blood –> platelets clump together in circulation and promote conversion of fibrinogen in to fibrin –> red cell fragmentation
What does a low reticulocyte count and anaemia suggest?
Suggests there is impairment of the bone marrow so it is unable to respond to the anaemia by making more RBCs
What % of blasts is normal in BM?
<5%
What are some causes of neutrophilia?
Corticosteroids (due to demargination)
Acute inflammation e.g. colitis or pancreatitis
Neoplasia
Myeloproliferative or leukaemic disorders
Pyogenic infection (MOST LIKELY)
Which infections classically don’t produce neutrophilia?
Typhoid, brucella, viral infections
Signs of a reactive neutrophilia
Toxic granulation, no immature cells, only neutrophils, heavy granulation, vacuoles in the neutrophils
Signs of malignant neutrophilia
massively raised neutrophil count, neutrophilia/basophilia, immature cells (myelocytes), splenomegaly = CML
Neutropenia + myeloblasts = AML