L9 - haemolytic anaemias and haemoglobinopathies Flashcards

1
Q

What is a haemolytic anaemia?

A

An anaemia that results from the abnormal breakdown (haemolysis) of RBC’s in the blood vessels or spleen

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2
Q

What is the normal life span of a RBC?

A

120 days

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3
Q

The bone marrow can compensate for haemolysis up to a point, what is the average life span that is deemed a haemolytic anaemia because the bone marrow can’t keep up producing new sells to compensate for the dying ones?

A

20–30 days

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4
Q

Symptoms of haemolytic anaemia are the same as other forms, i.e. shortness of breath, fatigue etc. However what symptoms do we see in haemolytic anaemias because of the haemolysis that goes on that we don’t see in other ones?

A

Jaundice - due to excess bilirubin (breakdown product of haem in RBC’s) NOTE - This also means that because of this patients are at increased risk of gallstones

Splenomegaly - overworking red pulp

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5
Q

Haemolytic anaemias are classified into acquired and inherited types. Give two examples of each class

A

Acquired - Microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia(MAHA)/autoimmune haemolytic anaemia/exposure to oxidants/severe burns/snake venom causing enzyme damage

Inherited - pyruvate kinase deficiency/G6PDH deficiency/hereditary spherocytosis/sickle cell disease

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6
Q

What is the underlying cause of a microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia?

A

RBC’s are damaged by trauma, most commonly moving through compromised vessels.

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7
Q

What would we seen on a blood film that would confirm a suspected haemolytic anaemia that is resulting from mechanical damage to cells

A

Schistocytes (fragments of RBC’s) - NOTE - this can also occur as a result of defective heart valves

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8
Q

What is the underlying mechanism behind autoimmune haemolytic anaemia?

What is the test for this?

A

The patients generates autoantibodies which bind to the RBC membrane, the spleen then recognises these as abnormal and removes them

Test is direct coombs test - uses an antibody to the antibodies
Note - there are two kinds - Warm (responds under warm lab conditions) - IgG mediated
and cold (IgM mediated)

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9
Q

Now we know the specific symptoms of a haemolytic anaemia, what are the specific signs?

A
  • Increased reticulocyte count
  • Raised bilirubin
  • Raised LDH - lactate dehydrogenase (red cells rich in enzyme)
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10
Q

What is a hemoglobinopathy and what are the major ones?

A

An genetic defect in one or more of the globin chains that make up haemoglobin

  • Alpha thalassemia
  • Beta thalassemia
  • Sickle cell disease
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11
Q

What happens in an alpha thalassemia?

A

Deletion or loss of function of one or more of the FOUR alpha thalassemia genes. Results in reduced or absent expression of the alpha globin chain, this results in aggregates of the B chain in excess -> damage to membrane -> mechanical damage kills them

NOTE - so the haemoglobin production is defective AND they are killed more easily

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12
Q

Is thalassemia microcytic, normocytic or macrocytic?

A

microcytic

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13
Q

distinguish between alpha thalassemia trait and haemoglobin H disease

A

In alpha thalassaemia trait, two of the four genes are affected you would see mild anaemia and microcytic, hypochromic cells

In haemoglobin H disease three of the genes are affected, we now see an increase in severity of anaemia and target cells and Heinz bodies in the blood film NOTE - these patients will have skeleyal abnormalities because extramedullary haemopoiesis occurs to compensate for defective RBC’s in the bone marrow

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14
Q

B-thalassemia trait (or minor) is symptomatically and signs identical to alpha thalassemia trait. Distinguish between B thalassaemia intermedia and major

A

Both would have severe anaemic symptoms and look similarly under the microscope - target cells, Heinz bodies, hypochromic, microcytic.
Clinically though intermedia is not transfusion dependent whereas major is (i.e. REGULAR blood transfusions, many will have to have some)

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15
Q

Iron overload is a major cause of premature death in thalassemia patients, explain

A

Patients absorb excess iron in their diet to compensate for ineffective haemopoiesis and also in severe cases have repeated blood transfusions which as we know is a risk factor for major iron build up

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16
Q

What are the specific treatments for thalassaemia

A
Iron chelation (removal) agents
Folic acid 
transfusion of RBC's 
Holistic care 
stem cell transplants
Antenatal screening
17
Q

What is sickle cell disease?

A

Inheritance of the sickle beta globin gene resulting in the formation of sickle cells under oxygen deprivation and anaemia

18
Q

Patients with a heterozygous mutant of HbS have a protection against malaria because of their malformed RBC’s, T/F?

A

T

19
Q

Patients with sickle cell disease are at increased risk of three types of anaemia - vaso-occlusive, due to occlusion of small capillaries, aplastic anaemia (where a region of bone marrow is damaged) and haemolytic anaemia. Give some possible consequences of sickle cell disease

A

anaemia
jaundice (haemolytic anaemia)
hyposplenism due to spleen infarction
End organ problems -e.g. neurological problems, kidney failure etc.

Acute and chronic pain

20
Q

What are the suggested treatments for sickle cell disease?

A

Folic acid
Penicillin and vaccinations when hyposplenism ensues
Hydroxycarbamide
Red cell transfusion

21
Q

Hereditary spherocytosis is inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion, mutations in the 4 genes of the cytoskeleton cause it, what are these?

A

Spectrin/ankyrin/band 3/protein4.2

22
Q

The spherical shape of RBC’s in hereditary spherocytosis means they are easily sheared in the spleen thus causing a haemolytic anaemia. What bodies are seen in the blood of these patients?

A

Howell-Jolly bodies

23
Q

How can a G6PDH deficiency lead to a haemolytic anaemia?

A

this is an inborn error of metabolism, it is the rate limiting enzyme of the pentose phosphate pathway. It supplies the reducing energy for NADPH which in turn protects against oxidative stress by maintaining glutathione levels. This is the only source of glutathione in RBC’s-> thus patients with the disease can suffer haemolytic anaemia in times of oxidative stress e.g. exposur eto certain chemicals

24
Q

how can a pyruvate kinase deficiency lead to a haemolytic anaemia?

A

Necessary for glycolysis -> RBC’s have no mitochondria so their only pathway for metabolism is inhibited -> water moves in an the cells haemolyse

25
Q

What is the cause of 95% of myeloproliferative neoplasms?

A

A mutation in JAK2 kinase causing overproliferation of a certain type of cell

26
Q

What is disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)?

A

A condition in which blood clots form throughout the body blocking small blood vessels

27
Q

Give some laboratory findings common to all haemolytic anaemias

A

increased reticulocyte count (marrow tries to compensate)/raised bilirubin/raised LDH (RBC’s rich in this too)

28
Q

What are the three crises that patients with sickle cell disease can experience?

A

vaso-occlusive due to occlusion of small capillaries causing end organ problems
haemolytic (because the sickle cells have a shorter half-life)
aplastic

29
Q

Sickle cell disease patients only have some of their RBC’s sickled?

A

Sickeld blood cells cause problems in times of oxygen deprivation, the shape is due to a mutated beta globin gene

30
Q

Describe the symptoms of someone with beta thalassemia major/ Haemoglobin H disease (severe thalassaemia)

A

hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, anaemic symptoms, skeletal abnormalities, potentially jaundiced as its a haemolytic aanaemia as well. In beta symptoms will be come apparent about 6 months after birth as this is when the beta gene begins to be expressed