Iron Anaemia and microcytic anaemia Flashcards
What are microcytic anaemias
Anaemias where erythrocytes are smaller than normal due to reduced rate of haemoglobin synthesis
What are the causes of microcytic anaemia
Reduced haem synthesis
- Iron deficiency
- Lead poisoning
- Anaemia of chronic disease
- Sideroblastic anaemia
Reduced globin chain synthesis
- alpha thalassaemia
- beta thalassaemia
Why is free, excess iron a problem
It is very toxic to cells
- acts as a catalyst in the fenton reaction - producing free radicals
- is deposited in organs as haemosiderin
What are the two types of dietary iron and how do they differ
Haem iron - from animals, more readily absorbed
Non-haem iron - from other sources, consists of both ferric and ferrous iron and is less readily absorbed
Where and how is non-haem iron absorbed
It is absorbed in the duodenum and upper jejunum
Divalent metal transport 1 facilitates ferrous iron uptake
Ferric iron is reduced to ferrous iron by reductase and then DMT1 uptakes the resultant ferrous iron
Which substances inhibit iron absorption and which increase absorption
Inhibitors
- Tannins
- Phylates
- Anatacids
- Fibre
Promoters
- Vitamin C
- Citrates
What regulates iron absorption
Hepcidin
Which protein transports iron
Transferrin
How is iron stored
As ferritin or as haemosiderin
How can iron deficiency occur
- Increased blood loss from bleeding
- Increased requirements
- Inadequate dietary support
- Decreased absoprtion
- Anaemia of chronic disease
Describe the process of cellular iron uptake
- ferric iron bound transferrin binds transferrin receptor and enters cytosol via receptor mediated endocytosis
- ferric iron within endosome relased by acidic microenvironment and reduced to ferrous iron
- ferrous iron transported to cytosol by DMT1
- once in cytosol, ferrous iron can be stored in ferritin, exported by ferroportin, or taken up by mitochondria for use in cytochrome enzymes
What are the signs and symptoms of iron deficiency
Tiredness, pallor, reduced exercise, angina, palpitations, headaches
Pica
Cold hands and feet
Low MCV, low MCHC, elevated platelets, low serum iron
Microcytic and hypochormic RBCs and anisopoikilocytosis