Paediatric Haematology Flashcards
What are the 4 main things to remember when treating a child as opposed to an adult?
1) May weigh more or less than 70kg
2) Congenital conditions are more relevant
3) Everything is moving
4) Children exist within a family - management often involved siblings, parents etc.
What are the 6 differences between child and adults RBCs?
1) Child site of haematopoiesis varies
2) Hb switching occurs
3) At birth 55-65% of Hb is HbF
4) Difference in red cell structure and metabolism
5) Larger red blood cells in children
6) Children have a higher haematocrit
What are the sites of haematopoiesis in children?
In embryo - yolk sac then liver and spleen
Bone marrow takes over but if this is insufficient liver and spleen can be re-recruited to help
What is Hb switching?
Chr 16 can produced zeta or alpha chains
Chr 11 can produce epslon, gamma, beta and delta chains
Different types of Hb composed of different chain combos are produced at different periods of gestation
What different Hbs are produced between 4-14 weeks of gestation due to Hb switching?
Hb Gower-1 = 2 zeta, 2 epslon
Hb Portland = 2 zeta, 2 gamma
Hb Gower-2 = 2 alpha, 2 epslon
What type of Hb is produced >14 weeks of gestation til birth due to Hb switching?
HbF = alpha 2 gamma 2
What 2 types of Hb are produced in the neonatal stage?
HbA = alpha 2 beta 2
HbA 2 = alpha 2 delta 2
How do child WBC counts differ to adult?
Similar numbers but children have higher lymphocyte counts
What type of Ig can cross the placenta, why is this physiologically appropriate?
IgG (IgM cannot)
IgG confers wider protection, whereas IgM would only confer protection against stuff you were currently exposed to
What is an important source of passive immunity in neonates?
Breast milk - has IgA, IgD, IgE, IgG, IgM
At how many months do children start producing there own Ab?
2-3 months
After how many months can children mount a satisfactory immune response?
6 months
At how many months are immunisations given?
2 months, with boosters
Although child cannot mount a satisfactory immune response at this point without vaccination until 6 months there would be a lot of neonatal deaths, vaccination at 2 months provides just enough protection
Which type of blood cell reaches adult levels first and why?
Platelets - reach adult leaves by week 18 of gestation
Birth is a bloody process, coagulation is very important
In what 3 ways do platelets at birth differ to adult platelets?
1) Initially larger but by birth slim down to adult size
Functionally different at birth:
2) Hyporesponsive to certain agonists
3) Hyperresponsive to vWF