Haematopoiesis and Anaemias Flashcards

1
Q

3 most important features of RBC

A
  1. Erythrocytes lack most of the organelles, in particular: Nucleus, ribosome, ER, Golgi, secretory vesicles, mitochondria
    2.Haemoglobin ->transport of O2…why not CO2
  2. Cytoskeleton and membrane proteins -> support shape and flexibility to squeeze into the capillaries (4-10 μm diameter
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2
Q

What is Heme made by

A

Heme is made by– Fe2+ = reduced form or Ferrous– Protoporphyrin IX mojety

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3
Q

What does the heme synthesis required

A

1.Enzymes -> some of them are mutated in some forms of anaemia
2. Cofactors: vitamin B12, vitamin B6 and folate -> lack will cause anaemia

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4
Q

Myeloid lineage and Lymphoid linage

A

Erythroid lineage = red blood cells
Megakaryocytic lineage =platelets Monocytic lineage = monocytes
Granulocytic lineage = granulocytes

Lymphoid- T, B, NK cells

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5
Q

Different types of Anaemia

A

Iron deficiency Anaemia (IDA)
* Vitamins and micronutrients deficiency anaemia
* Anaemia due to defects in the Bone Marrow and RBC production
* Anaemia from infections (parasitic, viral, bacterial)
* Anaemia of toxic or chemical injuries (snake venom ,lead poisoning)
* Anaemia from chronic diseases and chronic inflammation

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6
Q

Main causes anaemia

A

Iron- Malnutrition and malabsorption
Malaria- parasitic infections
Leukemias- bone marrow disease

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7
Q

Where do RBCs come from, what is their role and this the process called

A

Mature RBCs transport O2 around body
RBCs come from stem cells in the bone marrow
Production of RBCs is erythropoiesis

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8
Q

What are the stages of the Erythropoiesis?

A
  1. Stem cells
    2.Proerythroblast
  2. Early erythroblast - ribosome synthesis
    4 Late erythroblast - Haemoglobin accumulation
    5.Normubalst
  3. Reticulocyte - the nucleus is removed but it is not yet a RBCs it must stay in the bone marrow for 3 days before entering the blood, once it has entered the blood after 24-48hrs to becomes a RBCs
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9
Q

What is and where does the RBCS removal( damaged or old) take place?

A
  • It can happen in the spleen, liver and the bone marrow
    1. The macrophages engulf the RBCs and break them down
    2. Then there is a lot of Hemegloblin so it is broken down into heme and globlin heme= amino acids and globlin= bilirubin and iron
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10
Q

How are broken down products recycled?

A
  • For amino acids it enters the blood and moves into the bone marrow to be used for erythropoiesis
  • For Iron uses transporter known as transferrin which are used for the iron to go back to the bone marrow for erythropoiesis
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11
Q

What nutrients are needed for RBCs

A
  • Amino acids
  • Monosaccharides
    -Lipids
    -Vitamin B
    -Folic acid
  • Iron
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12
Q
A
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