Hemolytic Disease of the Newborn Flashcards

1
Q

In general terms, what is hemolytic disease of the newborn caused by?

A

blood group incompatibility between mother and fetus

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2
Q

What is hydrops fetalis? Is it specific to HDN?

A

It’s a fatal, severe accumulation of fluid in the fetus - not specific for HDN

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3
Q

What blood group is usually the issue in HDN?

A

It’s when the fetus inherits RhD antigen from dad when mom is Rh negative

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4
Q

Which pregnancy is usually affected and why>

A

The first is NOT affected because mom isn’t exposed to baby’s blood until later in the pregnancy and it takes longer for IgG to start being produced (IgM can’t cross the placenta). So it’s the NEXT pregnancy that’s the concern

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5
Q

What are some of the symptoms in HDN?

A

Anemia, which leads to extramedullary hematopoiesis and cardiac decompensation (leading to hydrops)
hemoglobin degradation leads to jaundice and kernicterus

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6
Q

If the HDN is mild, extramedullary hematotpoiesis where in the body may produce enough red cells to maintain normal numbers?

A

spleen and liver

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7
Q

The jaundice that occurs in HDN, is it from conjugated or unconjugated billirubin?

A

unconjugated (indirect bilirubinemia)

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8
Q

What is kernicterus?

A

it’s when unconjugated bilirubin binds to llipids in the brain causing serious damage to the CNS - the brain is edematous and yellow

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9
Q

What does the amount of antiD antibodies formed by mom depend on?

A

Depends on how much baby blood she was exposed to - she’ll only start making antibodies after she’s received more than 0.5 to 1 mL of Rh+ cells

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10
Q

How do you diagnose HDN?

A
  1. direct antiblobulin test will be positive in the baby because baby’s cells are coated with mom’s antibodies
  2. indirect antibolubilin test will be positive in mom
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11
Q

How do you prevent Rh-mediated HDN?

A

You give a drug called rhogam to the mom at 28 weeks and within 72 hours of delivery

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12
Q

What is Rhogam?

A

It’s anti-D antibodies (which sounds counterintuitive) that can’t cross the placenta. This means they can “mop” up any Rh+ baby cells that get into mom’s circulation before mom’s immune system gets a chance to form antibodies against them

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13
Q

How do you determine what dose of Rhogam to give the second time?

A

You have to determine the amount of fetomaternal hemorrhage

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14
Q

What tests can you use to determine the amount of fetomaternal hemorrhage?

A
  1. Kleihauer-Betke test - you prepare a smear of mom’s blood, expose to acid bath (which removes adult Hb, but not fetal Hb). Then stain the smear and look at it - mom’s cells will look pale and baby’s will still be dark - then just count them and get a percentage
  2. Flow cytometry test - use mom’s blood, apply anti–HbF antibody with fluorescent tag, run though gel and look for intense staining in the HbF region - that has to be from baby’s blood
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15
Q

Does HDN occur with the ABO blood antigens?

A

Yes - incompatibility in 25% of pregnancies, but only 10% of those have HDN and only 1 in 200 need treatment

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16
Q

Why is ABO incompatibility rarely serious?

A

because most Anti-A and anti-B antibodies are IgM and can’t cross, plus baby cells express A and B poorly still

17
Q

ABO hemolytic disease occurs almost exclusively in infants born to what blood type of mom?

A

babys usually A or B, born to an O mom

18
Q

What’s the protection for ABO incompatibility

A

there isn’t one

19
Q

WHat’s the treatment for HDN?

A
  1. minimally affected - phototherapy
  2. severely affected - total exchange transfusion through umbilical vein
  3. plasmapheresis of the mom to remove antibody
  4. high dose IV immunoglobulin can be used too