Haemoachromatosis Flashcards
Haemachromatosis?
Iron overload
What are the types of haemachromatosis?
Primary - Genetic (GH)
Secondary - Acquired - caused by events such as excessive blood transfusions or iron supplement overuse
What is the main principle of GH?
Absorb too much iron (normally 2mg/day), in HC, absorb around 5-6mg/day - results in up to 20mg accumulation in the body
What is the triad originally used to diagnose GH
Cirrhosis (Liver fibrosis)
T2D (Pancreas fibrosis)
Bronzing of skin (hyperpigmentation - increased haemosiderin and melanin production)
What is the cause of organ damage in GH?
Fenton reaction - produces free radicals which cause damage to lipids (peroxidation), DNA, proteins. Forms a cycle where free radicals form react with non free radicals to form new free radicals
What is the genetics behind GH?
Autosomal recessive mutation in the HFE gene (chromosome 6) - point mutation of Cytosine to Tyrosine at position 2 - C282Y - defective HFE - involved in gut absorption of iron and uptake into cell - exact mechanism unknown however thought to interact with the Transferrin receptor
What percent of people with iron overload are homozygous for C278Y mutation?
60-93% - wide range due to varying diagnostics around world
What is the disease progression in GH?
Mutation in the HFE gene
High plasma iron (increase transferrin saturation - TSAT)
High organ iron (increase in serum ferritin -SF)
Organ damage (greater than 1000mcg/L SF)
What other factors affect disease progression?
Diet Alcohol intake Infections Pregnancy Excess Bleeding Low gene penetrance
What are some of the signs/symptoms of GH?
Liver - fibrosis/scarring - cirrhosis Pancreas - fibrosis - T2D Heart - Cardiomyopathy (heart failure) Arthralgia - joint pain Chronic fatigue Skin - bronzing
How many years does it take for symptoms to develop?
40-60 years
Longer in pregnant women as they lose blood through menstrual cycle
What are the measurements we can use for diagnosis of GH?
TSATS - transferrin saturation = SI/TIBC - variable throughout day (greater than 40%F 50%M indication of potential GH)
SF - proxy measure for build up on iron in the tissues - >300mcg/L indication - affected by infection and inflammation (acute phase reactant)
Use both? - genetic typing?
What algorithm was developed to diagnose GH?
NZ -
TSAT >40%
SF >1000mcg/L
Family history of GH
May miss subclinical GH
How can we manage GH?
Phlembotomy - remove around 500ml of blood a week until Hb levels return to normal level - use TSATS and SF to indicate normal iron levels - continue 4 times a year after. Effective, cheap, simple
Diet changes - reduce vit C (increases iron absorption), avoid red meat, reduce alcohol (iron and alcohol synergistic hepatoxin), avoid shellfish (vibrio vilnicifius)
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