Red Cell Abnormalities and Hemoglobin Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Hemoglobin starts in the _____ stage?

A

Erythroblast

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2
Q

Polycythemia

A

Too many red cells in the blood

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3
Q

MCV

A

mean corpuscular volume = size of cells

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4
Q

Average life span of a RBC?

A

120 days. Become fragile and are destroyed in the spleen.

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5
Q

___% of the body’s RBC’s is produced every day

A

1%

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6
Q

What is the fate of the porphyrin portion of hgb when it is destroyed?

A

Converted into the bile pigment, bilirubin, which is released into the blood and secreted through the liver with bile.

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7
Q

Sickle cell anemia

A

Point mutation of valine for glutamic acid in the beta chain of a hemoglobin molecule.
Transmitted by recessive inheritance

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8
Q

SIckle cell trait

A

Heterozygote with one sickle cell gene. 40 - 45% of hemoglobin is HbS. Not likely to sickle, generally asymptomatic

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9
Q

Sickle cell disease

A

Homozygous recessive. 80 - 95% of hemoglobin in HbS. Concentration of HbS correlates with risk for sickling.

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10
Q

SIckle Cell Epidemiology

A

Affects .1 - .2% of african americans (disease)

10% of african american have the trait

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11
Q

Sickle cell pathophysiology

A

At low oxygen tension, HbS becomes sickled. SIckling occurs as a result of elongates crystals inside RBC’s.

  • Makes it almost impossible for the cell to pass through capillaries.
  • Crystals rupture RBC’s, leading to anemia
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12
Q

What causes the sickling?

A

Anything that may reduce the affinity of hgb for oxygen.

- Hypoxia from altitude, cold, stress, exertion, acidosis

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13
Q

SIckle cell manifestation

A
Pain and organ failure from occlusion
Severe hemolytic anemia
Chronic hyperbilirubinemia
Acute pain in any part of the body
Infarction can cause organ damage
Swelling of hands and feet
Acute chest syndrome
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14
Q

Acute chest syndrome

A

Leading cause of death in sickle cell disease.
1. Red cell sickling and pulmonary capillary vessel occlusion.
2. Pulmonary infarction and atypical pneumonia
3. Pulmonary infiltrates, SOB, chest pain, cough
4, Resp. insufficiency with hypoxia, exacerbates sickling.

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15
Q

Is prenatal screening available for sickle cell?

A

yes

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16
Q

SIckle Cell Mgmt

A

NO known cure
Avoid situations that can precipitate sickling
Treatment aimed at reducing symptoms
- Pain control, hydration, infxn tx, blood transfusions

17
Q

Sickle cell prophylaxis

A
  • Administration of penicillin from 2 months to 5 years of age.
  • Full immunization
  • Hydroxyurea (promotes fetal hgb)
18
Q

Alpha-Thalassemia

A

Most common is asians, blacks

Impaired production of alpha globin chains, which leads to a relative excess of beta globin chains.

19
Q

Beta-Thalassemia

A
Mediterranean anemia (italy and greece, blacks)
Impaired production of beta globin chains, which leads to a variable excess of alpha globin chains.
20
Q

How does thalassemia present?

A

Hypochromic microcytic anemia.
Normal RDW
Decreased RBC count
Normal ferritin

21
Q

What diagnoses Beta thalassemia?

A

Heinz bodies in bone marrow.

22
Q

What is the most prevelant thalassemia?

A

Beta thalassemia trait/minor

23
Q

Major targets of lead toxicity

A

RBC’s (microcytic, hypochromic anemia)
GI tract
Kidneys
Nervous system

24
Q

What will you see on a blood smear in lead poisoning?

A

Basophilic Stippling

25
Q

Other lead toxicity complications

A
Lead collic (abd pain)
Lead lines (metaphysis of bones on kids)
Low IQ, poor classroom performance
Kidney damage
26
Q

Lead toxicity tx

A

Remove the lead source

Chelation (for heavy metal poisoning)

27
Q

Acidosis causes….

A

Less affinity for oxygen. Oxygen is released from hgb.