Module 13: Anemia (e) Flashcards
1
Q
Iron Deficiency Anemia
-Info
A
- Most common type — Occurs when iron loss exceeds iron intake & stores become depleted
- Mircocytic, hypochromic - Most common causes
- Blood loss
- Occult malignancy
- ASA
- Poor iron absorption & impaired RBC production
2
Q
Iron Deficiency Anemia
-Treatment?
A
- Ferrous Sulfate — Only contains 20% elemental iron
—5 mg ferrous sulfate = 1 mg elemental iron - Dosing is weight based
A/E’s
-N/V/D, Constipation, Dark stools
Pt Education
- Take on empty stomach
- 3 times daily is best
- Vitamin C helps increase absorption
- May require stool softener
Monitoring
- Hgb, Hct, ferritin 4 weeks
- Reticulocytes count if severe — check in 5-10 days
3
Q
Iron Deficiency Anemia
-Pharm Treatment
A
- Ferrous Sulfate — Only contains 20% elemental iron
—5 mg ferrous sulfate = 1 mg elemental iron - Dosing is weight based
A/E’s
-N/V/D, Constipation, Dark stools
Pt Education
- Take on empty stomach
- 3 times daily is best
- Vitamin C helps increase absorption
- May require stool softener
Monitoring
- Hgb, Hct, ferritin 4 weeks
- Reticulocytes count if severe — check in 5-10 days Iron Deficiency Anemia
4
Q
Iron Deficiency Anemia
-Non-Pharm
A
- Diet rich in foods containing iron
- Organ meats (liver)
- Red meat
- Beans
- Green leafy veggies
- WHole grains
5
Q
Folic Acid Deficiency
-Info
A
- High Risk Groups
- Alcoholics
- Vegetarians/Vegans
- Infants fed powdered or goat’s milk
- Pregnant women - increasing requirements
- Celiac disease, Crohn’s, giárdia, short bowel syndrome
- Phenytoin, carbamazepine, methotrexate**, Trimethoprim - Prevention
- Adequate dietary intake
- Supplementation in pregnancy
6
Q
Folic Acid Deficiency
-Treatment/Monitoring
A
- Oral folic acid 1-2 mg/day 4-5 weeks
- Monitor
- Hgb levels begin to rise w/in one week
- H&H at regular intervals - can monitor after 2 wks then monthly until stable
7
Q
Pernicious Anemia
-Info
A
- Vitamin B12 deficiency that is autoimmune or linked to heredity
- Other causes
- Vegetarian/vegan (pregnant women)
- Crohn’s
- Gastric Bypass - Prevention
- Adequate dietary intake (breakfast cereal**TEST)
- Diet - Mollusks (clams) fortified cereals, liver, salmon, milk, eggs
8
Q
Pernicious Anemia
-Treatment
A
- Nutritional deficit — 1000 mcg/day cobalamin until B12 levels normalize
- Pernicious anemia — 1000 mcg IM daily for 1 wk followed by 1000 mcg IM weekly for a month
- Monitoring
- Reticulocytes, H&H, B12 monitored before therapy, after 7 days and at regular intervals
- Potassium, LFTs
9
Q
Anemia of Chronic Disease
-Info
A
- Most common form of anemia in older adults
- Normocytic, normochromic (80%)
- Macrocytic, normochromic (20%)
Causes
- Osteomyelitis, TB, Rheumatoid dz, hepatitis, carcinoma, myeloma, lymphoma, leukemia
- Renal failure — secondary to erythropoietin deficiency
- Endocrine disorders — reduce bone marrow responsiveness
TREAT UNDERLINING CAUSE **
10
Q
Thalassemia
-Info
A
- Inherited blood disorders characterized by too little hemoglobin
- Mediterranean, middle eastern, and south Asian populations - Two types
- Alpha thalassemia
- Beta Thalassemia (often misdiagnosed as Iron-deficiency anemia - Macrocytic, hypochromic
- These people have TOO much Iron in their bodies — DO NOT give iron supplement
11
Q
Thalassemia
-Treatment
A
- Alpha Thalassemia
- Usually NO therapy
- Low iron diet
- Iron chelation therapy for iron overload - Beta Thalassemia
- Avoid iron supplements
- Severe — BLOOD Transfusion