Intro to Hematology Flashcards
RBC count
RBC count: normally 5 million RBC/μL
Hemoatocrit = % volume of blood occupied by RBCs (usually ~3x hemoglobin value)
Hemoglobin values vary by gender and age:
• Higher in newborns since HgbF (fetal) predominates = less efficient at delivering O2 to tissues (left shifted O2 dissociation curve)
• Higher in males because testosterone increases EPO production
Describe how hematopoiesis is regulated by cytokines such as erythropoietin and G-CSF to ensure an adequate supply of blood cells.
IL-3
o Provides proliferative and survival signals
o Affects many marrow cell types
GM-CSF (Granulocyte/macrophage-colony stimulating factor)
o Promotes proliferation and differentiation of early myeloid precursors
o Activates mature PMNs
o Also impacts T calls and other cell types
G-CSF (granulocyte-CSF)
o Promotes proliferation
o Faster maturation of neutrophils
o Activates neutrophils for phagocytosis and killing
Erythropoietin
o Produced by kidney peritubular cells when low O2
• Ex: decreased RBC numbers, fetal Hgb (binds tightly to O2), chronic hypoxemia
Be able to recognize the precursors of red cells at various stages of development.
Reticulocytes = young RBCs
• Still contain ribosomes and RNA
• Stain using Wright or Methylene Blue stain = purple hue
• Large, spherical
Early erythroblasts
• Dark blue staining cytoplasm
• Blast-like nucleus
Maturing RBC
• Cytoplasm gaining hemoglobulin = appearing more pink
• Nucleus = round, blue and white, patchy (“salami-like”) chromatin
Be able to recognize the precursors of neutrophils at various stages of development.
o Bands = young neutrophils
o At first = both differentiating AND dividing
o When become bands = no longer divide; just differentiate (post-mitotic)
Neutrophils: Causes for increase
Infection
Reactive: o Demargination o Inflammation/necrosis o Metabolic (uremia, gout, eclampsia, acidosis) o Cancer o Drugs (steroids, Li, GM-CSF)
Neoplasia
o Myeloproliferative disorder (ex: CML)
Neutrophils: Causes for decrease
Autoimmune Infection (viral, TB, sepsis) Medication side effects Marrow failure o Congenital o Cyclical/familial o Aplastic anemia o Storage disease Neoplasia o Myelodysplastic syndrome o Extensive metastases o Leukemia/lymphoma involving marrow
RBC: Causes for increase
- Dehydration
- Hypoxia (real or imagined with increased Epo)
- Neoplastic (Myeloproliferative disorder - polycythemia vera)
RBC: Causes for decrease
Inadequate Production: • Nutritional deficiencies (Fe, Zn, Cu, Folate, B12) • Abnormal hemoglobin production (thalessemia) • Infection (e.g. Parvovirus) • Drug/toxin (Pb, EtOH) • Marrow failure or filled with cancer Destruction/loss • Bleeding • Autoimmune • Abnormal membrane, enzymes or Hgb
Platelets: causes of increase
Reactive
o Infection, Fe deficiency, etc.
o Paraneoplastic (renal cell ca)
Myeloproliferative disorder
Platelets: causes of decrease
Marrow failure (intrinsic or extrinsic)
Destruction
– Consumption (including hypersplenism)
– Autoimmune (direct or drug associated anti-platelet antibodies)
Lymphocytes: causes of increase
Infection
– EBV and some other viruses
– Pertussis (in children but not adults)
- Dilantin and other drugs*
- Postvaccination
- Acute Stress (transient)
- Thyrotoxicosis
- Smoking
- Neoplasia (more common in older people)
Lymphocytes: causes of decrease
- Congenital immunodeficiencies (SCID, DiGeorge, etc.)
- Steroids or other immunosuppressives
- Autoimmune diseases, sometimes
- Severe bone marrow failure (inherent or iatrogenic)
- Hodgkin lymphoma (sometimes others)
- HIV/AIDS (late and without HAART), decreased CD4+ T cells
Describe the pathophysiology and the main clinical and pathologic features of aplastic anemia.
Aplastic anemia = stem cell compartment doesn’t maintain bone marrow production
o See pancytopenia (all types of cells decreased) and low reticulocyte counts
Biopsy = hematopoietic cells replaced by adipocytes
Causes:
Congential:
• Fanconi anemia (DNA repair defect)
• Diamond-Blackfan anemia (ribosomal defect)
Idiopathic: may be autoimmune attack
Secondary:
• Radiation
• Chemicals: benzene, organophosphates, organochlorines, DDT & other pesticides, ecstasy, etc.)
• Drugs: chemo (cyclophosphamide), chloramphenicol, sulfa, gold, anticonvulsants, etc.
• Viral infection (EBV, non-A, B, C, G hepatitis)
Treatment of aplastic anemia
Remove agent if known
Supportive therapy
• Antibiotics
• RBC and/or platelet transfusions
• Immunosuppressive therapy (cyclosporine, high dose glucocorticoids, anti-thymocyte globulin)
Definitive treatment:
Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation
• Immune and bone marrow suppress the patient
• Infuse HSC (preferable from HLA-identical sibling)
• Result: 80% long term survival
Describe the clinical uses of recombinant erythropoietin and granulocyte colony- stimulating factor.
Erythropoietin = increases RBC production
o Chronic renal failure = because not produce enough Epo
o Anemia due to renal failure
o Bone marrow depression due to chemotherapy, AIDS, bone marrow transplantation, cancer and chronic inflammation
o Targeted levels = 10-12 g/dL (higher levels associated with increased incidence of cardiovascular complications and higher mortality)
G-CSF = increases neutrophil counts
o Chemotherapy-induced neutropenia = reduces duration and incidence of infection
• Ex: myelosuppressive chemo, bone marrow transplantation
o Mobilizes HSC for collection
o Treats severe chronic neutropenia
o Reverses treatment-associated neutropenia in AIDS patients