Haemolytic anaemia Flashcards

1
Q

What is haemolytic anaemia

A

anaemia due to shortened RBC survival

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2
Q

approximately how long can RBC circulate without nuclei

A

120 days

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3
Q

which system removes senescent RBC and organs included

A

reticuloendothelial system-liver and spleen

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4
Q

what is reticulocytotic

A

increased number of reticulocytes (immature RBC)

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5
Q

3 steps in haemolysis

A

shortened red cell survival (30-80 days)
bone marrow compensate with increased red blood cell production
increased young cells in circulation = reticulocytosis

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6
Q

what is compensated haemolysis

A

RBC production able to compensate for decreased decreased RBC life span

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7
Q

incompletely compensated haemolysis

A

RBC production unable to keep up with decreased RBC life span

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8
Q

4 clinical findings of haemolytic anaemia

A

Jaundice
pallor/fatigue
splenomegaly
dark urine

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9
Q

what is haemolytic crises

A

increased anaemia and jaundice with infections/precipitants

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10
Q

what is aplastic crises

A

anaemia , reticulocytopenia with parvovirus infection

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11
Q

what are 3 chronic clinical findings in haemolytic anaemia

A

Gallstones-pigment
leg ulcer
folate deficiency

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12
Q

7 lab findings in haemolytic anaemia

A
  • Increased reticulocyte count
  • Increased unconjugated bilirubin
  • Increased LDH (lactate dehydrogenase)
  • Low serum haptoglobin protein that binds free haemoglobin
  • Increased urobilinogen
  • Increased urinary haemosiderin
  • Abnormal blood film
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13
Q

3 classification of haemolytic anaemia

A

inheritance
site of rbc destruction
origin of rbc damage

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14
Q

2 types of inherited haemolytic anaemia and examples of both

A

hereditary - hereditary spherocytosis

acquired -paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria

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15
Q

2 types of origin of RBC damage and examples of both

A

intrinsic - G6PD deficiency

extrinsic - Delayed haemolytic transfusion reaction

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16
Q

2 types of site of RBC destruction and examples of both

A

intravascular - thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura

extravascular- autoimmune haemolysis

17
Q

what is intravascular haemolytic anaemia

A

when the rbc is broken down in the circulation and the free hb is bound to plasma haptoglobins

18
Q

what is extravascular haemolytic anaemia

A

excessive removal of cell by macrophages of RE system

19
Q

what are the 2 haemogloinopathies

A

sickle cell disease

thalassaemia

20
Q

what is heriditary spherocytosis

A

defcts in vertical interaction in the red cell membrane

for example in spectrin, band 3 , protein 4.2 and ankyrin

21
Q

what is hereditary elliptocytosis

A

defects in horizontal interaction

for example in proetin 4.1, glycophorin c and spectrin-HPP

22
Q

4 management of hereditary spherocytosis

A

monitor
folic acid
transfusion
splenectomy

23
Q

Clinical features Hereditary spherocytosis

A
  • Asymptomatic to severe haemolysis
  • Neonatal jaundice
    -Jaundice, splenomegaly, pigment gallstones
    -Reduced eosin-5-maleimide (EMA) binding — binds to
    band 3
  • Positive family history
  • Negative direct antibody test
24
Q

3 metabolic pathway of RBC

A

glycolysis
HMS or hmp shunt
Rapoport luebering shunt

25
Q

what is the role of HMP shunt

A

generates NADPH and reduced glutathione

protects the cell from oxidative stress

26
Q

what are the effects of glucose-6- phosphate deficiency

A

Oxidative stress:

  • oxidation of Hb by oxidant radicals results in denatured Hb aggregation and forms heinz bodies which bind to membrane
  • oxidised membrane proteins reduces RBC deformability
27
Q

Role of pyruvate kinase

A

required to generate ATP-essential for membrane cation pumps

28
Q

what are the effects of pyruvate kinase deficiency

A

cells lose large amount of potassium & water, becoming dehydrated & rigid

29
Q

Genetics of G6PD deficiency and PK deficiency

A

G6PD- X linked

PK- autosomal recessive

30
Q

what 2 things make up haem

A

ferrous iron and protoporphyrin IX

31
Q

what are the globin chains of HbA, HbA2 and HbF

A

HbA- 2 alpha and 2 beta
HbA2- 2 alpha and 2 delta
HbF- 2 alpha and 2 gamma

32
Q

what are the 2 types of globin disorder

A

thalassaemia : production of increases or decreased amount of globin chain which is structurally normal
variant haemoglobin : production of a structurally abnormal globin chain

33
Q

what is thalassaemia

A

imbalanced alpha and beta chain production

34
Q

what can excess unpaired globin chain cause

A
  • they are unstable
  • can precipitate and damage RBC and their precursors.
  • ineffective erythropoiesis in bone marrow
  • Haemolytic anaemia
35
Q

Diagnosis of thalassaemia trait

A
  • Asymptomatic
  • Microcytic hypochromic anaemia
  • Low Hb, MCV, MCH
  • Increased RBC
  • Often confused with Fe deficiency
  • HbA2 increased in ß-thal trait — (diagnostic)
  • a-thal trait often by exclusion
  • globin chain synthesis (rarely done now)
  • DNA studies (expensive)
36
Q

what are some of the clinical findings in sickle cell disease

A
Painful crises
aplastic crises
infection 
acute sickling: 
- chest syndrome
-splenic sequestration 
- stroke
Chronic sickling effects :
-renal failure
-avascular necrosis bone
37
Q

what are some of the laboratory findings in sickle cell disease

A
Anaemia
reticulocytotic
increased NRBC 
raised bilirubin 
low creatinine
38
Q

2 confirmation tests for sickle cell anaemia

A
solubility test (Hb S precipitated )
electrophoresis