Anemia in Childhood Flashcards

1
Q

Factors to consider in anaemia evaluation?

A
  • Hb
  • MCV
  • Reticulocyte count
  • Red cell morphology (film)
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2
Q

Microcytic anaemia causes?

A
TAILS
- Thalassemia
- Anaemia of chronic disease
- Iron deficiency
-
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3
Q

Normocytic anaemia in childhood?

A
  • Chronic inflamm
  • Blood loss
  • Transient erythroblastis of childhood
  • bone marrow disorders
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4
Q

Macrocytic anaemia of childhood?

A
  • B12
  • Folate
  • Liver disease
  • Diamond-Blackfan
  • Hypothyroidism
  • Bone marrow failure
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5
Q

How do foetal RBCs compare to adult wrt size?

A

Foetal RBCs are macrocytic compared to adults

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6
Q

Which form of anaemia may bone marrow disorders present with?

A

Can be:

  • Normochromic
  • Normocytic
  • Macrocytic
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7
Q

What are the types of bone marrow disorder?

A
  • Infiltration: (malignant i.e. leukemia or non-malignant i.e. storage disorder)
  • Myelodysplasia (not making more)
  • Fanconi anaemia
  • Rarer: aplastic, Pearson syndrome, CDE
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8
Q

What are the causes of haemolysis causing anaemia?

A
INTRINSIC
-Enzymopathy (G6PD)
- Membranopathy (HS, HE)
- Haemoglobinopathy
- Immune HA (autoimmune, isoimmune)
EXTRINSIC
- DIC
- HUS
-Burns
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9
Q

Ix for haemolysis causing anaemia

A
  • Blood film (spherocytes, elliptocytes etc)
  • Reticulocytosis
  • Unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia
  • +/- haptoglobin, LDH
  • DAT
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10
Q

Hx features anaemia?

A
  • Perinatal Hx
  • Blood loss (GI, GU)
  • Naematode infestation
  • Chronic infective / inflammatory conditions
  • Drug / toxin exposure
  • Dietary Hx (vegan, iron etc)
  • Race and ethnicity (G6PD, sickle cell, thalassemia)
  • Previous anaemia, exchange transfusion, FHx etc
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11
Q

What does RDW indicate?

A

RBC distribution width
Indicates spread of size of RBCs. Increased in virtually all cases of iron deficiency anaemia (if 20+ likely iron deficiency).

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12
Q

What must be done prior to Hb electrophoresis? Why?

A

Ferritin. Falsely negative Hb electrophoresis result if ferritin low. Always do ferritin first.

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13
Q

What should be ordered in setting of reasonable clinical suspicion of iron deficiency anaemia?

A

Ferritin; not necessarily “iron studies”. Iron deficiency is diagnosed on serum ferritin: low serum iron does not necessarily indicate low total iron body stores.

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14
Q

How does thalassemia differ from iron deficiency on blood results?

A
  • MCV usually lower
  • RBC higher
    than thalassemia than iron deficiency
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15
Q

Why are premis at risk of iron deficiency?

A

Incomplete iron replacement (missed X weeks of iron supplementation via placenta). Need to supplement iron (i.e. fortifier etc)

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16
Q

What are non-dietary causes of iron deficiency?

A
  • Rapid growth in childhood + RFx (prem, LBW)
  • Malabsorption (i.e. Coeliac)
  • Meorrhagia
  • GI bleeding / epistaxis
  • Intestinal naematodes
17
Q

Recommendations for increasing dietary iron intake in children?

A
  • Don’t introduce cow’s milk until 12m+ (as BM or formula replacement)
  • Limit cow’s milk to 500mL per day
  • Solid food 4-6m
  • Cut down milk to increase solids
  • Change infant from bottles to cup
  • Encourage high iron containing foods
  • iron supplement (i.e. Ferro Liquid)
  • Vitamin C (aid absorption i.e. dilute fruit / veggie juice)
  • Dilute milk
  • Offer solids first
18
Q

When throughout lifespan is RBC production lowest?

A

Reaches nadir at 2w of life (UTD says 6-9w).

= physiological nadir.

19
Q

Ix for girl suggestive of bone marrow disorder causing anaemia?

A
  • FBE
  • Blood film
  • LDH + haptoglobin
  • Reticulocyte count
  • LFTs (inc bilirubin)
  • Coags
20
Q

DDx pancytopenia?

A
  • Acute leukaemia
  • Metastatic marrow infiltration (i.e. lymphomas going to bone)
  • Aplastic anaemia
  • Hypersplenism
  • Myelosuppressive medications
21
Q

RFx for leukemia development

A
  • Prenatal XR expsure
  • High dose therapeutic irradiation
  • Down syndrome
  • other genetic
22
Q

What is the commonest childhood malignancy 1-7y?

A

ALL

23
Q

What are the leukemia sanctuary sites?

A
  • CNS
  • Testes
    Often need regular LPs / testicular exam to monitor
24
Q

Which ALL has best prognosis?

A

B cell ALL CD10

25
Q

What is the most common cause of anaemia in young infants?

A

Physiologic anaemia : erythropoiesis decreases after birth due to increased tissue oxygenation and decreased EPO

26
Q

How may pathologic anaemia be differentiated from physiologic anaemia of infancy?

A
  • Anaemia under 135 in first month
  • Less than 90
  • Signs of haemolysis (jaundice, scleral icterus, dark urine) or symptoms of anaemia (irritability, poor feeding).
27
Q

What are the common causes of pathologic anaemia in newborns?

A
  • blood loss
  • immune haemolytic disease (Rh or ABO)
  • Congenital infection
  • Twin-twin transfusion
  • Congenital haemolytic anaemia (e.g. hereditary spherocytosis, G6PD)
28
Q

Preterm vs term wrt anaemia?

A
  • Low HCT and Hb
  • Shorter RBC lifespan
  • impaired EPO production due to immature liver
    Therefore decline earlier after birth and more severe.
29
Q

What is suggested by anaemia detected at 3-6m of age?

A

Haemoglobinopathy

30
Q

What is Diamond Blackfan anaemia?

A

Disorder of bone marrow: congenital erythroid aplasia.