Haemolytic Anaemia Flashcards
Define haemolytic anaemia
Anaemia due to the premature destruction of RBC in the blood (<120 days)
What are the causes/risk factors of haemolytic anaemia?
Hereditary • Membrane defects - Hereditary spherocytosis - Hereditary elliptocytosis • Metabolic defects - G6PD deficiency • Haemoglobinopathies - Sickle cell anaemia - Thalassaemia
Accquired • Autoimmune - Warm antibodies (IgG) – SLE, lymphomas, CLL - Cold antibodies (IgM) – Mycoplasma, EBV, lymphomas - Paroxysmal cold haemoglobinuria • Alloimmune - Transfusion reaction - Haemolytic disease of the newborn • Drugs - Penicillin - Quinine • Mechanical - Artificial heart valves - Microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia – HUS, DIC • Infection - Malaria - Sepsis • Liver disease • Hypersplenism • Paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria
What are the symptoms of haemolytic anaemia?
General anaemia • Tiredness • Lethargy • Dyspnoea • Malaise • Pallor
Haemolytic
• Haematuria
• Jaundice
What are the signs of haemolytic anaemia?
General
• Pallor
• Tachycardia
Haemolytic
• Jaundice
• Hepatosplenomegaly
What investigations are carried out for haemolytic anaemia?
• FBC - low Hb; High MCHC due to reticulocytosis and/or spherocytosis.
• Reticulocyte Count - increased as a physiological bone marrow response to haemolysis.
• Peripheral Smear - reticulocytosis: A physiological bone marrow response to haemolysis.
- Polychromasia - similar finding as reticulocytosis.
- Sickle Cells
- Schistocytes: MAHA
- Spherocytes : Hereditary Spherocytosis
- Elliptocytes: Hereditary Elliptocytosis
- Degmacytes: Bite Cells or Blister Cells result from the removal of denatured haemoglobin from RBCs by splenic macrophages.
- Howel-Jolly Body: DNA clusters in the RBC due to hyposplenism and severe haemolysis.
- Heinz Bodies: Denatured Hb in the RBCs –seen in G6PD Deficiency under a methyl violet stain.
- Acanthocytes: Spur Cells are spiked RBC membranes e.g. in Liver disease.
• Unconjugated BR - increased haem catabolism.
• Serum LDH - high in intravascular haemolysis.
• Haptoglobin - low since haptoglobin binds free Hb, with low plasma values suggestive of increased free Hb.
• Urinalysis - haemoglobinuria is present in intravascular haemolysis. Positive for blood; no RBCs.
• Coomb’s Test -
Identifies erythrocytes coated with antibodies (agglutinins) using antihuman globulin. Warm agglutinin and cold agglutinin. Positive suggests immune aetiology; negative suggests non-immune aetiology
• Osmotic Fragility Test for Hereditary Spherocytosis (Spectrin mutation test).
• Ham’s Test - lysis of erythrocytes is acidified serum in paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria. More recently – red cells are analysed, using monoclonal antibodies to the GPI-anchored proteins (CD55 and CD59) and flow cytometry.
• Hb Electrophoresis
HbS present in sickle cell disease; elevated levels of HbA2 and HbF in beta thalassaemia
• Donath-Landsteiner Antibody - Indicated if associated with exposure to cold. The presence of complement on the red cells but negative direct antiglobulin test is also suggestive of a cold autoimmune haemolytic anaemia.
• G6PDD - testing for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency includes a fluorescent spot test followed by definitive assay of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity by spectrophotometry.
LFTs:
Elecated in Liver disease; Alcoholic cirrhosis in particular is associated with RBC membrane changes and haemolysis.