haemoglobinopathy Flashcards

1
Q
  • What is specialised language used to describe in haematology?
  • What are some causes of microcytosis?
A

blood films and counts

Deficit in iron
anaemia of chronic disease
thalassaemia

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2
Q
  • What is Beta-thalassaemia?
  • What is Alpha-thalassaemia?
  • What does the term ‘major’ refer to in terms of thalassaemia?
A

Defect in beta-globin chain synthesis

Defect in alpha-globin chain synthesis

Significant impairment of globin chain (beta/alpha) synthesis
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3
Q
  • What specific types can macrocytes be?

- What are some causes of macrocytosis?

A

Round, Oval, Polychromatic

Lack of vitamin B12 or folic acid

Liver disease and ethanol toxicity

Haemolysis (polychromasia)

Pregnancy
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4
Q
  • What portion of the red blood cell has less haemoglobin and is therefore paler?
  • What does the term hypochromia refer to?
  • What often comes with hypochromia?
A

A third of the diameter from the centre (less Hb therefore less red and more pale)

Means that eryhthrocytes have a larger area of central pallor than normal

Microcytosis

(iron deficiency and thalassaemia being common causes)
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5
Q
  • What does the term polychromasia refer to?
  • What does a blue tinge in a blood film indicate and why?
  • What is polychromasia associated with?
A

Describes an inreased blue tinge to the cytoplasm of a red cell

That the red cell is young (reticulocyte) caused by stain methylene blue which stains for a higher RNA content 

Macrocytosis
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6
Q
  • What is reticulocytosis?
  • When may reticulocytosis occur?
  • What does the term anisocytosis refer to?
A

Refers to the presence of increase numbers of reticulocytes

As a response to bleeding or red cell destruction (haemolysis) or response to treatment with iron, vitamin b12 and folic acid

Red cells showing more variation in size than normal
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7
Q
  • What does the term poikilocytosis refer to?
  • What is meant by the haematocrit?
  • What is meant by the packed cell volume?
A

Red cells showing more variation in shape than normal

Proportion of red blood cells in your blood, equivalent to the packed cell volume but not measured by centrifugation

The proportion of a column of centrifuged blood occupied by red blood cells
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8
Q

What are target cells?

When do target cells occur?

A

accumulation of haemoglobin in the centre of the central pallour
dark dot seen in middle of cell

obstructive jaundice
liver disease
haemoglobinopathies-a group of recessively inherited genetic conditions affecting the haemoglobin component of blood.
hyposplenism- reduction in spleen function

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9
Q

what are sickle cells and how does its shape form

how does haemoglobin S occur

A

they are sickle or crescent shaped and they result from the polymerisation of haemoglobin S
in its deoxygenated form it is much less soluble than haemoglobin A

when one or two copies of abnormal beta globin gene (beta S) are inherited
mutation in beta globin gene causes a charged glutamic acid residue to be replaced by an uncharged valine molecule

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10
Q

what are schistocytes?

A

fragments of red blood cell, indicating a red blood cell has fragmented

may be caused by shearing process caused by platelet rich clots in small blood vessels eg disseminated intravascular coagulopathy

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11
Q

why is a reference range used

how is a reference range calculated

what are the caveats of reference ranges

A

need to know what is normal before you can interpret any clinical sign or lab test

get a sample of healthy volunteers
analyse them with the same instruments and techniques used for patient samples
data is analysed with an appropriate statistical technique

not all results within reference are normal
not all results outside of RR is abnormal

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12
Q

what mutation results in HbS

what properties of hbS means that it becomes sickle cell shaped?

A

missense mutation at codon 6 on the beta globin chain

charged glutamic acid is replaced by uncharged valine
deoxyhaemoglobin S is insoluble
causes it to polymerise to form tactoids that distort the RBC to a sickle shape

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13
Q

what diseases do sickle cell disease incorporate

A

Sickle Cell anaemia (hbSS)
a number of compound heterozygous states that lead to a disease syndrome due to sickling
eg HbSC
HbS beta thalassaemia

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14
Q

what are the two main pathogenesis of SCD

A

hypoxia leads to the polymerisation of HbS

results in the rigid sickling of rbcs which causes:

haemolysis of RBC and reduced RBC survival

  • leads to gallstones and jaundice due to inc bilirubin
  • leads to low Hb conc (anaemia)
  • Aplastic crisis (Parvovirus 19 where bine marrow erythropoiesis has been shutdown - fine if rbc has a turnover of 120 days but if only 20 days- fatal)

Vasocclusion

  • tissue damage, necrosis (infarction), pain, dysfunction
  • in bones, kidney, brain, cerebral, retina, lung, spleen
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15
Q

Why is it that those with HbSS do not show signs of anaemia

A

HbS has a low affinity to 02

so gives up more oxygen- so body not 02 deprived

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16
Q

how does HbS low affinity to 02 contribute to anaemia

A

more 02 means less erythropoietic activity

which adds to the anaemia

17
Q

what are the early manifestations of SCD

A

dactylitis
pooling of RBC in spleen ‘
infection

18
Q

what is the function of the spleen

what is hyposplenism and what does it cause

what must people with hyposplenism do

A

remove damaged old or malformed RBCs
immune defence

when repeated vaso-occlusion causes the spleen to not work after 5 years
this will cause increased susceptibility to encapsulated bacterial infection

take prophylactic immunisations
immunisations

19
Q

what are examples of severe complications of SCD

A

acute chest syndrome

  • pulmonary infiltrate
  • fever, cough, chest pain, tachypnoea

stroke

  • common in childhood
  • major cerebral vessels
20
Q

what are the lab features of Sickle cell anaemia

A
Hb low (60-80/L)
reticulocytes usually high 
blood film
- sickled cells 
- boat cells
- target cells
- Howell Jolly bodies - appear as no more quality control from spleen
21
Q

what is the sickle solubility test

What is the flaw with this method

A

add a reducing agent to blood, converts oxy Hb to deoxy Hb
if positive result the solubility of blood decreases if HbS gene is present
solution becomes turbid - not transparent anymore

Definitive diagnosis requires electrophoresis or high performance liquid
or chromatography to separate proteins according to charge
Cant differentiate HbSs with HbAS