Anemia case lecture Flashcards

1
Q

6 year old S/F boxer
History of coccidioidomycosis, takes daily fluconazole for 5+ years
Had gastric metallic wire removed endoscopically in June 15. No problems in last 5 months since procedure.
Due for vaccinations and coccidiomycosis titer.
BAR, happy dog..
Assessment

A

Valley fever; historical, asymptomatic
Ceruminous debris AU
Grade 1 dental disease

Low HCT (PCV)
Low Hb
Clumping noted
Albumin low
Globulin High
ALP HIGH
Serum electrolytes normal
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2
Q

Fluconazole dose for treating active fungal disease?

A

5-10 mg/kg PO BID

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3
Q

Valley Fever Profile

A

CBC/Chem/UA

Coccidiodes titer

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4
Q

If patients coccidiodides titers are stable from last year and patients CBC is normal…

A

Consider discontinuing fluconazole

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5
Q

Vaccine protocol..

Dogs

A

DA2PP Vax: right shoulder
Rabies: R hip
Bordetella va: intranasal
Consider flucosamine supplementation

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6
Q

Coccidiodies titers

A

IgM
IgG (positive in sadies case)
IgG titer 1:8

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7
Q

Anemia

A

Regenerative? r/o hemorrhage/loss (3rd space, GI tract) unlikely hemolysis s
Non-Regenerative: r/o ACD, decreased production (immune disease/PRCA/non-regenerative IMHA, myelofibrosis, myelodysplasia, neoplasia) - unlikely CKD.

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8
Q

Hypoalbuminemia

A

Loss 9kidney/PLN0 - unlikely GI tract due to hyperglobulinemia
Negative acute phase reactant
Decreased production- no strong suspicion for hypoadrenocorticism or liver disease.

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9
Q

Hyperglobulinemia

A
Immune stimulation (dental disease, known infection (historically valley fevere), undiagnosed infection, inflammation.
Neoplasia (unlikely due to mild elevation)
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10
Q

Elevated ALP (normal ALT)

A
Drug reaction (fluconazole)
Endocrinopathy (HAC, HypoT4) no associated clinical signs
Other ALP isoenzyme (bone, steroid)
Infiltrative hepatic disease (neoplasia) intrahepatic cholestasis
Extrahepatic cholestaisis (pancreatitis, cholelith, mass, mucocele)
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11
Q

Diagnostics recommended with..

Anemia

A

Reticulocyte count

Abdominal ultrasound

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12
Q

Diagnostics recommended with..

Hypoalbuminemia

A

UA +/- UPC ratio

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13
Q

Diagnostics recommended with..

Hyperglobulinemia

A

No specific diagnostics, can consider protein electrophoresis if increases.

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14
Q

Diagnostics recommended with..

Elevated ALP

A

Abdominal ultrasound

Discontinue fluconazole.

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15
Q

Abdominal ultrasound can look for..

A

Evaluate the hepatobiliary tree
Evaluate for third space losses
Evaluate for GI masses

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16
Q

What is a 4DX?

A
Tests for 
(erhrlichia) E. Canis
(anaplasma)A. Platys
heartworm d. immitis
lyme disease b. burgdorferi
17
Q

Reticulocyte counts over what are considered regenertative?

A

60,000

18
Q
Markedly anemic dog
inappropriate regenerative response
Classically expect reticulocyte count below 200
negative for ehrlichia
major concern is decreased production
undiagnosed bone marrow neoplasia.
Revised diagnostics?
A

Chest radiographs: screen for metastatic disease or diagnosed infection/lymphadenopathy
Bone marrow aspirate/biopsy if radiographs are clear.

19
Q

Pale pink, normal LN

Femoral pulses bounding, 2/6 L apical systolic murmur.

A

Tramadol to control discomfort.

20
Q

Myelofibrosis

A

Proliferation (non-clonal) of fibroblasts in bone marrow- bone marrow scarring.
Primary myelofibrosis not well documented in dogs
May occur secondary to bone marrow necrosis
-likely to damage to bone marrow microvasculature
Underlying possibilities:
-Immune mediated disease
-infectious disease (septicemia, e. canis)
-drugs (estrogen, cephalosporin’s)
-neoplasia (usually hemolymphatics)

21
Q

Suspct myelofibrosis secondary to immune mediated disease

A

Guarded prognosis and usually takes 3-4 months to respond to treatment
Treat with immunosuppressive medication
-concern for underlying coccidiomycosis and potential recrudescence)
Prednisone 30-40 mg/day
Cyclosporine 100-125 mg PO q12 hr
Discontinue fluconazole because it can be to due to chronic fluconazole treatment.

22
Q

What is fluconazole?

A

?