L11 - Haematological Changes In Systemic Disease Flashcards
What would be the typical picture of a patient with anaemia of chronic disease?
Associated chronic inflammatory condition/infectious condition or malignancy Raised cytokines Normal whole body iron Microcytic/normocytic anaemia decreased ferroportin
Hepcidin production is increased due to inflammatory cytokines in ACD but it’s clearance is reduced in chronic kidney disease, what would symptoms be
Reduced GFR normocytic/microcytic anaemia Normal/high ferritin elevated CRP Uraemia (High urea due to kidney dysfunction) which causes a reduce in RBC lifespan (inhibits megakaryocytes leading to thrombocytopenia Potential GI bleed due to low platelets low ferroportin
How would you treat an anaemia in a patient with chronic kidney disease?
Treat the kidney disease and give erythropoietin
Rheumatoid arthritis can be seen by a rheumatoid hand, what common haematological symptoms do we often see in a patient due to taking NSAID’s for the illness
Anaemia
Thrombocytopenia
Neutropenia
Feltys syndrome is a long term complication of RA, what is the triad consisting of
Rheumatoid arthritis
Splenomegaly
Neutropenia
Alcohol is toxic to the liver, what haematological symptoms can it cause
Thrombocytopenia (due to impaired thrombopoietin production which is made in the liver)/
Splenomegaly due to portal hypertension/
anaemia (due to splenic pooling) which could progress to a pancytopenia/
Coagulation factor deficiency/
Target cells
What haematological features would you see in someone post-operatively?
anaemia, mild ‘reactive’ thrombocytosis or neutrophilia
What kind of infection would you expect if you saw a lymphocytosis
Viral
How can sepsis lead to DIC
Sepsis can allow bacteria to enter the epithelium, pathological activation of coagulation -> microthrombi formed in circulation -> clotting factors used up -> DIC
(DIC is a widespread pathological clot which leads to thrombosis of small vessels and bleeding due to using up all the clotting factors)
What kind of blood film can be seen in patients with a malignancy that has entered the bone marrow?
Leucoerythroblastic film - granulocyte precursors and nucleated RBC’s on blood film
Describe common causes of
a) neutropenia
b) neutrophilia
c) lymphocytosis
4) eosinophilia
A)severe sepsis/post viral infection
B) bacterial infection
C) viral infection
D) parasitic infection
Briefly explain anaemia of chronic disease
Chronic inflammatory condition causes release of cytokines such as IL-6 -> this causes a reduction in eryhtropoietin production -> it also causes the upregulation of hepcidin from the liver -> this inhibits the translocation of ferroportin -> this means we have a functional lack of iron as it is traped in ferritin form within the enterocytes and recycling macrophages (as they have ferroportin too). Note ACD also results in a reduced lige span of RBC’s
Give some examples of diseases causing ACD
Chronic kidney disease/RA/Ulcerative colitis/crohn’s etc.
Name one thing to do with the kidneys that coudl cause the following:
a) anaemia
b) polycythaemia
c) neutropenia
d) neutrophilia
e) thrombocytopenia
f) thrombocytosis
a) ACD
b) renal tumour
c) immunosuppression post renal transplant/myeloma
d) inflammation/infection/steroids
e) uraemia/drugs
f) iron deficiency
Distinguish between ACD and iron deficiency
In iron deficiency total body iron will be low, in ACD it is a functional lack due to increased activity of cytokines and macrophages meaning that iron can’t be absorbed