Anemia 1 Flashcards

0
Q

Define hematocrit.

A
  • ratio of the volume of RBCs to that of whole blood

- 3x[Hb] approximately

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1
Q

4 components of peripheral blood.

A

-RBC, WBC, platelets, plasma

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2
Q

MCV vs. RDW

A
  • MCV: mean cell volume; average volume of red cell in specimen
  • RDW: red cell distribution; measure of the variation of the RBC volume in specimen
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3
Q

Parameters of microcytic, normocytic, and macrocytic.

A

-micro: MCV100

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4
Q

What does it mean if a RBC is hypochromic?

A

-increased central pallor so that it is greater than 1/3 of the RBC diameter

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5
Q

T/F: A reticulocyte has a nucleus while an erythrocyte does not.

A

-False, neither have nuclei. The reticulocyte is slightly larger and blue-er because it still contains rRNA

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6
Q

Define anemia and give its overall result.

A
  • decrease in the # of RBCs or less than the normal quantity of Hb in the blood
  • overall reduction in O2 carrying capacity of the blood, leading to tissue hypoxia
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7
Q

3 general mechanistic categories of anemia.

A
  1. decreased production
  2. increased destruction
  3. loss due to bleeding
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8
Q

What does a high or low reticulocyte count suggest about an anemia patient?

A
  • high: destructive problem or bleeding problem; marrow is appropriately trying to compensate for reduction in O2-carrying capacity by making more RBC
  • low/normal: suggests production problem; marrow is not responding appropriately to the low O2-carrying capacity, so suggests it is the cause of problem
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9
Q

An anemic patient’s MCV came back to be <80, what is on your differential diagnosis? Do the same for normocytic and macrocytic anemias.

A

Micro: iron deficiency anemia, thalassemia, anemia of chronic disease, sideroblastic anemia
Normo: hemolytic anemia, hemorrhage/blood loss, sickle cell disease, anemia of chronic disease, aplastic anemia
Macro: megaloblastic anemia ( due to meds, B12/folate deficiency), liver disease, alcohol, toxins, myelodysplastic syndrome

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10
Q

Who is at risk for iron deficiency anemia? What will their blood smear look like? What is the follow up for these patients?

A
  • toddlers, adolescent girls, women of childbearing age, older adults with occult blood loss
  • microcytic, hypochromic anemia, high RDW; can see pencil cells occasionally
  • iron studies and bone marrow (usually not needed but will show decreased iron stores)
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11
Q

How will thalassemia appear on a blood smear? How can you tell this apart from other smears with potentially the same characteristics?

A
  • microcytic, hypochromic anemia like iron deficiency anemia BUT often has VERY low (<70) MCV and not as high of a RDW
  • target cells seen
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12
Q

What type of anemia can Hereditary Spherocytosis cause? What does its peripheral smear look like?

A
  • hemolytic anemia due to tendency for hemolysis in spleen

- normochromic, normocytic anemia with high retic count and spherocytes are present

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13
Q

What does a spherocyte look like?

A
  • RBC that has lost membrane and taken on spherical shape

- lack of central pallor

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14
Q

Describe the surface area: volume ratios of normal RBCs, spherocytes, and target cells.

A
  • Normal is baseline
  • Spherocytes is low SA:V
  • Target cell is high SA:V
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15
Q

Megaloblastic anemia is on the differential for what RBC size? Give 3 things that can cause it.

A
  • macrocytic: most common type of macrocytic anemia

- B12 deficiency, folate deficiency, medications

16
Q

Give 2 characteristics seen on peripheral blood smear from someone with megaloblastic anemia.

A
  • macrocytic RBCs

- hypersegmented neutrophils

17
Q

Common causes of global anemias

A
  • iron deficiency
  • other nutritional deficits like Vit A, B, folic acid
  • infectious disease: malaria, hookworm, HIV/AIDS, TB
  • congenital causes: hemoglobinopathies
18
Q

4 consequences of anemia

A
  • increased risk of maternal and child mortality
  • adverse effects on cognitive and physical development of children
  • decreased work productivity
  • increased postoperative morbidity
19
Q

3 things mature RBCs lack.

A

-nucleus, mitochondria (only glycolysis), ribosomes (no longer makes Hb)

20
Q

How many hemes does a molecule of Hb contain?

A

-4; one on each a2B2 subunit

21
Q

If one were to classify an anemia off of mechanistic approach vs. a morphologic approach, what would they analyze for either approach?

A
  • mechanistic: retic count

- morphologic: MCV

22
Q

Reticulocyte count vs. corrected reticulocyte count.

A
  • RC: % of circulating RBCs which appear to be reticulocytes
  • CRC: in anemia, the total RBC is low and therefore, we need to be a correction to judge the actual number of retics being made by BM; = % retics x (actual HCT)/(ideal HCT)
23
Q

4 categories of decreased RBC production

A
  1. lack of building blocks: Fe, folate, B12 deficiency
  2. inability to use iron: anemia of chronic disease
  3. EPO deficiency: renal disease
  4. Lack of RBC precursors: aplastic anemia, toxins, immune-mediated
24
Q

3 categories of blood loss leading to anemia.

A
  • obvious acute bleeding: gun shot wound
  • occult bleeding: colon cancer
  • induced bleeding: constant and repeated testing; excessive blood donations
25
Q

Signs and symptoms of anemia

A
  • fatigue, decreased exercise tolerance, light headedness, pallor of skin, nail beds, conjunctivae; due to low O2 delivery
  • rapid, bounding pulse, dyspnea, eventually heart failure; cardiovascular response