RBC Labs and Anemia Classifications Flashcards
What is normocytic anemia?
decreased RBC mass due to peripheral destruction (hemolysis) or underproduction
normal RBC size
MCV: 80-100
How are hemolytic and underproduction normocytic anemias differentiated?
Reticulocyte
- young RBC in blood
- bluish tint due to residual RNA in cytoplasm
- ~1-2% of RBCs in circulation normally
Reticulocyte count is falsely elevated in anemia; correcction must be done to get true value = RC * Hct/45
underproduction, corrected reticulocyte % is <3%
hemolytic, corrected reticulocyte % is >3%
What are the types of hemolytic anemia?
- extravascular hemolysis
- intravascular hemolysis
What is extravascular hemolysis?
What findings will it have?
Predominant breakdown of RBCs by reticuloendothelial system (macrophages) of the liver, spleen, and lymph nodes (occurs outside the vasculature in these organs). Hemoglobin broken down into bilirubin and iron is recycled.
- anemia
- splenomegaly
- increased unconjugated bilirubin/jaundice
What is intravascular hemolysis?
What findings will it have?
Predominant breakdown of RBCs within vasculature. RBC contents spill directly into blood where they can be found and are excreted by the kidney.
- hemoglobinemia
- hemoglobinuria**
- hemosiderinuria** (renal tubular cells trap and degrade HGB to hemosiderin, release it days later into the urine)
- decreased serum haptoglobin (depleted by binding free hemoglobin to recycle)
What is microcytic anemia?
(pathophys and lab finding)
decreased RBC mass due to lack of hemoglobin components (iron, protoporphyrin, or globin)
decreased RBC size
MCV: <80 (norm 80-100)
What are the main types of microcytic anemia?
- iron deficiency anemia
- anemia of chronic disease
- sideroblastic anemia
- thalassemia
What is macrocytic anemia?
(pathophys and lab finding)
decreased RBC mass frequently due to impaired DNA synthesis/ineffective hematopoiesis
increased RBC size
MCV: >100 (norm 80-100)
Typically accompanied by megaloblastic anemia:
- ovalocytes (large, oval-shaped RBCs)
- nuetrophil hypersegmentation
What is anisocytosis?
Increased variance in RBC size = increased RDW
Think:
- iron deficiency
- sickle cell
- folate/B12 deficiency
- autoimmune hemolytic
What is poikilocytosis?
pressence of abnormally shaped RBCs (teardrop cells, target cells, etc.)
What are target cells and when are they seen?
Cells with a dark, hemoglobin filled spot in the the central pallor.
occurs when there is low amounts of hemoglobin in the cell
- thalassemia
- iron deficiecny
- sickle cell (autospleenectomy)
- splenectomy/hypoplasia (removes target cells)
What do ferritin levels represent?
stored iron
What does an elevated LDH represent?
hemolysis