GM: Haematology Flashcards

1
Q

What causes a normocytic anaemia?

A

Anaemia without altered RBC structure

Anaemia of chronic disease

Acute blood loss

Aplastic anaemia

Haemolytic anaemia

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2
Q

What are the causes of microcytic anaemia

A

Thalassaemia: AR defects of haem chains

Anaemic of chronic disease

Iron deficency:can also be normocytic

Lead poisoning: blocks heme synthesising enzymes

Sideroblastic: Iron wont fit into RBCs

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3
Q

How do you investigate iron deficiency anaemia?

A

FBCs showing low Hb, can confirm if low ferritin

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4
Q

What is the initial management of iron deficiency anaemia?

A
  1. oral iron

+ IV iron or blood transfusion

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5
Q

For anaemia, when do you refer to…

Haematology

A

Supplementation fails to increase by 20g/L over 2-4 weeks and no GI or Gynae criteria

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6
Q

Paraesthesia, changes to mood and vision+/- mild jaundice suggests which anaemia?

A

B12 deficiency

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7
Q

What investigations suggest B12 deficiency

A

Macrocytic anaemia

Hypersegmented polymorphs

Low cobalamin is B12, low folate is folate

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8
Q

How do you treat B12 deficiency?

A

No neuro: IM hydroxycobalamin 3x day 2 weeks; 1 per 3 months afterwards

Neuro: IM 1mg every other day until improves

TREAT B12 BEFORE FOLATE

give folic acid 5mg day 4 months

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9
Q

When do you refer a vit B12 deficiency to…

Haem

Gastro

A

Haem: Uncertain, malignancy, resistant to treatment

Gastro: IBD, malabsorption, GI malignancy

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10
Q

How doe sickle cell present on…

FBC

Blood film

A

Microcytic anaemia

Sickle cells, howell-Jolly bodies

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11
Q

Outline the inheritance of sickle cell anaemia

A

AR inheritance of HbS instead of A.

One gene casues trait

Two causes disease

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12
Q

Compare vaso-occlusive, splenic sequestration, aplastic crisis and acute chest syndrome in terms of…

Pain

Associated symptoms

Lab findings

A

VOC // SS // AC // ACS

Localised pain // abdo pain // painless // painless

Fever, priapism // HSM, hypotension // infective Hx // Resp symptoms

Raised Hc // Severe anaemia // severe anaemia // Infiltrates on X-ray

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13
Q

How do you treat sickle cell crises?

A

Admit

Treat infection

IV fluids

Keep warm

Analgesia

Aspirate if priapism

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14
Q

What prophylaxis is given to sickle cell patients

A

Penicillin 3m-5yrs

PPV23 every 5 years

MenB + ACWY then another MenB 4 weeks later

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15
Q

What patient features might point towards thalassaemia?

A

Pronounced forehead and jaw

Jaundice, gallstone, splenomegaly

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16
Q

How do you diagnose thalassaemia?

A

Haem electrophoresis

DNA testing

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17
Q

How do you treat thalassaemia that is

alpha

Beta…

minor

intermedia

major

A

Alpha: monitor. Transfusions and bone marrow transplant potentially.

Bm: Conservative

BI: monitor + transfuse

BM: regular transfusion, chelation and splenectomy. Bone transplant can be curative

18
Q

Anaemia + gallstones + large spleen

Blood film…

Diagnose and treat

A

Hereditary spherocytosis

Folate supplementation + splenectomy

19
Q

Patient with PMHx of infections + jaundice after eating beans

A

G6PD deficiency

Heinz enzyme assay to confirm

Avoid triggers

20
Q

What are the features of leukaemia?

A

Abnormal bruising

Splenomegaly, lymphadenopathy

Palness, fever, fatigue

21
Q

Where suspected, what are the 1st line and GS test in leukaemia?

A

1st: <48hr FBC

GS: Bone marrow biopsy

+ blood film biopsy

22
Q

How are the leukaemias distributed by age?

A

ALL CLLmates have CMMon AMbitions

ALL: <5s, >45s

CLL: Over 55

CML: Over 65

AML: Over 75

23
Q

How can ALL, CLL, AML and CML be differentiate based on

Clinical history

Blood results

A

ALL: Children, Down’s syndrome, Blast cells (left)

CLL: Most common in adults, Smudge cells (right

AML: Myeloproliferative, Auer rods (middle)

CML: Raised WCC/low Hb, plts, pancyto

24
Q

How do you treat leukaemia?

A

Chemo and steroids

25
Q

What are the general features of a lymphoma?

A

Painless, assymetrical lymphadenopathy

+ systemic B symptoms

26
Q

How do NHL and HL differ on…

Age

Symptoms

Cells

Associations

A

NHL // HL

>75s // 20s, 70s

Early B symptoms, extra-nodal disease // painful nodes on alcohol

Depends on subtype // Reed sternberg cells

27
Q

How is Lymphoma confirmed?

A

Lymph node biopsy

+CT/MRI/PET

28
Q

What is myeloma and its subgroups

A

Plasma cell malignancy resulting in excess antibody production

MGUS: Raised antibodies without specific infection

Multiple myeloma: affected multiple sites

Smouldering: MGUS progression with higher Ig levels; waldenstrom’s if specifically IgM raised

29
Q

>60s presents with bone pain.

Bloods show rasied calcium, total protein and renal impairment

What is the diagnosis

A

myeloma

30
Q

What investigations are performed in suspected myeloma?

A

Monoclonal IgM or IgA in serum and urine (BJ proteins)

Increased plasma cells on bone marrow biopsy

Whole body MRI for bone lesions

+ ‘tear-drop skull’ on X-ray

31
Q

B symptoms + splenomegaly + the following bloods indicate what?

Raised Hb

Raised platelets

Low Hb, abnormal platelets + WCC, teardrop RBCs

A

Myeloproliferative disorders

Polycythaemia vera

Essential thrombocytopaenia

Myelofibrosis

32
Q

How do you treat…

Polycythaemia vera

Essential thrombocytopaenia

MF

A

PC: Venesection, chemo

ET: chemo

MF: Chemo + stem cell transplant

33
Q

How do you stage Hodgkin’s lymphoma?

A

Ann-Arbor staging

I: Single lymph node

II: 2 or more nodes/regions on same diaphragm side

III: Nodes on both sides of diaphragm

IV: Spread beyond lymph nodes

+ A: Pruritis only

B: >10% weight loss, fever >38 degrees, night sweats

34
Q

What are the diagnostic criteria for myeloma

A

Factor: Major // minor

Imaging: Plasmacytoma // osteolytic lesions

Plasma cells: 30% // 10-30%

M protein: Elevated // minor elevations

+ low antibody levels for minor

NEED 1 MAJOR + 1 MINOR / 3 MINOR

35
Q

What are the subtypes of non-hodgkin’s lymphoma and their associations?

A

Burkitt’s: EBV, tumour lysis, ‘starry sky’ histology

MALT: H. pylori, perigastric tissue

Diffuse B cell: rapidly growing painless mass in >65yrs

36
Q

Muscle cramps in a NHL patient just starting chemo suggests what and how is it prevented?

A

Tumour lysis syndrome in burkitt’s lymphoma

Give rasburicase to prevent uric acid –> allantoin

Allopurinol is alternative

37
Q

Infant experiencing painful swelling in hands and feet in absence of other pathology suggests what?

A

Thrombotic crises

38
Q

How can you distinguish ITP, TTP and DIC in terms of…

Symptoms

Labs

Cells

A

ITP // TTP // DIC

Bleeding // ‘The Terrible Pentad’* // Bleeding, sepsis

high bleed time // high bleed, low platelets // high bleed, low platelets + D-dimer

none // schistocytes // schistocytes

39
Q

Polycythaemia rubra vera is most likely to convert into which cancer?

A

AML or myelofibrosis

40
Q

What test confirms the diagnosis if spherocytes are found on blood film?

A

DIRECT coomb’s test

confirms diagnosis of haemolytic anaemia

41
Q
A