4 - Iron Metabolism and Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

why does iron need carrier proteins?

A

ferrous iron is very reactive and will cause oxidative damage to cells

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2
Q

2 carrier proteins for iron

A

intracellular - ferritin

circulation - transferrin

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3
Q

what is the rate of iron turnover in a day? how much is needed for erythropoiesis?

A

20-25 mg/d turnover

20 mg/d for erythropoiesis

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4
Q

where is iron absorbed in the GI tract?

A

duodenum

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5
Q

what channels are used in iron absorption?

A

divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1) - lumen to enterocyte

ferroportin 1 - enterocyte to circulation

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6
Q

where are RBCs degraded and by what cell type?

A

in the spleen by macrophages

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7
Q

what protein is responsible for regulation of iron metabolism and how does it work?

A

hepcidin - negatively regulates iron absorption in GI and release from macrophages

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8
Q

where is hepcidin synthesized?

A

hepatocytes

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9
Q

do hepcidin levels increase or decrease with inflammation?

A

increase

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10
Q

2 general mechanisms of inherited iron overload conditions

A

hepcidin deficiency or hepcidin resistance

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11
Q

most common form of inherited iron overload and mode of inheritance

A

classic (type 1) hemochromatosis

autosomal recessive

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12
Q

mechanism of classic hemochromatosis

A

low hepcidin

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13
Q

juvenile hemochromatosis (type 2)

A

mutation in hemojuvelin gene or gene for hepcidin > little or no hepcidin
presents in late childhood / early adulthood

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14
Q

how does beta thalassemia lead to iron overload?

A

ineffective hemoglobin leads to continous erythropoietic signal, which overrides the iron overload signal keeping hepcidin levels low

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15
Q

clinical manifestations of iron overload

A

cirrhosis, diabetes (may improve w/ tx), joint pain, osteoporosis, restrictive and dilated cardiomyopathy, arrhythmias, heart failure (reversible), increased skin pigmentation, increased risk of liver cancer

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16
Q

first line tests for iron overload

A

transferrin saturation and serum ferritin

17
Q

main causes of iron deficiency

A

chronic blood loss, increased demands (ex growth, pregnancy, EPO), malabsorption, poor diet (mainly in developing countries)

18
Q

clinical manifestations of iron deficiency anemia

A
pallor, fatigue, exercise intolerance
cardiomegaly
pica
cognitive impairment
defects in leukocyte/lymphocyte fn
Plummer Vinson syndrome
cerebral vein thrombosis
19
Q

Plummer Vinson syndrome

A

occurs in iron deficiency. triad of koilonychia (spooned nails), atrophic glossitis, esophageal web

20
Q

how can lead poisoning cause iron deficiency?

A

competition for DMT1 transporter in gut

21
Q

what should you assume iron deficiency is in an adult male or postmenopausal woman until proven otherwise?

A

GI blood loss

22
Q

anemia of inflammation

A

normocytic (or slightly microcytic) and resistant to iron therapy
due to hepcidin increases (transient)
must treat underlying disease to get rid of it

23
Q

how does iron metabolism contribute to anemia of chronic kidney disease?

A

dec kidney fn > dec clearance of hepcidin > inc hepcidin levels > dec iron levels