Haemopoiesis, Erythropoiesis And Iron Flashcards

1
Q

Where are blood cells produced

A

In the bone marrow

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2
Q

Describe the difference in distribution between infanthood and adulthood of bone marrow

A

Infant: Extensive throughout skeleton
Adult: Predominantly in pelvis, sternum, skull, ribs, vertebrae

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3
Q

Describe the process of haematopoeisis

A

Multipotential hematopoetic stem cells
Go to Common lymphoid progenitor cells–>Lymphocytes

Also go to Common Myeloid Progenitor–>Megakaryocyte+Granulocyte+Erthyocyte

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4
Q

What system controls and removes blood cells

A

Reticuloendothelial system

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5
Q

What organ is responsible for the disposal of blood cells

A

The spleen

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6
Q

What is the membrane of rbcs specialised to do? If damaged, what does it make the rbc

A

Make rbc flexible

Makes rbc fragile and likely to lyse–>anaemia

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7
Q

What are the three properities that globin chains add to haemoglobin

A

protect haem group from oxidation, Increase solubility, Permits variation in oxygen affinity

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8
Q

Describe how erythropoiesis is controlled

A

Reduced pO2–>Increase erthyropoetic hormone (from kidney)–>Increased synthesis of rbcs in the bone marrow–>Increased pO2–>Reduction in production of Erythropoetin

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9
Q

Name the two main metabolic pathways in rbcs

A

Glycolysis

Pentose Phosphate Pathway

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10
Q

How is iron in the body controlled

A

By controlling the absorption of iron and the iron released from macrophages. No mechanism for excretion

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11
Q

In which two carriers is iron stored

A

Ferritin- eg in hepatocytes

Haemosiderin-Macrophage iron

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12
Q

Where is the majority of iron stored.. what about the other 5% of iron?

A

Majorityin hepatocytes as ferritin

Hemosiderin constitutes the remaining 5% in kupffer cells (macrophages in the liver)

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13
Q

Does haem iron exist as ferrous iron (Fe2+) or ferric iron (Fe3+)?

A

Ferrous. Non haem exists as ferric iron

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14
Q

Describe th eprocess of how ferric iron is transported into the bloodstream from the gi system

A

In the stomach Fe3+–>Fe2+
Fe2+ binds to transferrin
Enters epithelial cellls lining the intestine
Either stored in the enterocyte as ferritin or transported into the bloodstream via ferroportin
Then either stored in the liver or used in Hb

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15
Q

How is iron taken into cells

A

By binding of iron-transferrin complex to transferrin receptor

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16
Q

What two substances aid in the absorbtion of iron?

A

Ascorbic acid and vit C

17
Q

What is the name of the central regulator of iron metabolism and how does it work?

A

Hepcidin
Released by the liver
Synthesis is increased in iron overload
binds to ferroportin and prevents it working
so iron can enter epithelial cells, but remains stored there aas cannot enter the bloodstream

18
Q

List 6 symptoms if anaemia

A
tiredness
Pallor
decreased exercise tolerance
cardiac symptoms (eg angina)
Tachycardia
increased resp rate
19
Q

Name two tests used to test for iron deficiency

A

Ferritin( if otherwise well. Acute phase protein so can increase with inflammation

CHR

20
Q

Suggest treatments for iron deficiency

A
Dietary advice
Oral iron supplements
Intramuscular iron injections
Intravenous iron
Transfusion (only if severely anaemic)
21
Q

Describe the process of hereditary haemochromatosis (why iron incresses)

A

Mutations in the HFE gene
HFE normally competes with transferrin for binding to transferrin receptor
Mutated HFE cant bind so transferrin has no competition, so too much iron enters cells from GI system

22
Q
What chemical stimulayes
a- Lymphocyte production
b- Megakaryocyte production
c- Erythrocyte production
d- Granulocyte production
A

a- ILs and TNFs
b- thrombopoietin
c- Erythropoetin
d- Granulocyte colony stimulating factor

23
Q

What does the RES consist of?

A

Phagocytic cells

24
Q

Give 4 functions of red blood cells

A

carry Hb
Maintain Hb in a reduced state
generate energy
maintain osmotic equilibrium

25
Q

How is Haemoglobin catabolised?

A

Hb–>Haem–>bilirubin
Bilirubin goes to the liver, used for bile
bile absorbed in the colon and excreted in the kidneys

26
Q

what can increased destruction of red blood cells lead to an why?q

A

Jaundice

Product of Hb catabolism is bilirubin

27
Q

Name four sites where available iron is kept

A

Hb
Myoglobin
tissue iron
transported iron in serum

28
Q

Two features of the blood film in iron deficiency anaemia?

A

Hypochromic red blood cells (Decreased Hb in cells)

Microcytic red blood cells

29
Q

Three causes of iron deficiency?

A
Decreased uptake
Increased loss (Eg Gi problems)
Excessive use (pregnancy)
30
Q

What is haemochromatosis? Complication?

A

Iron deposition in organs–>organ damage

Liver cirrhosis, diabetes, skin pigmentation, hypogonadism, cardiomyopathy

31
Q

Two causes of haemochromatosis?

A

Hereditary or transfusion associated