Haematology (asthma) Flashcards

1
Q

How to prevent haemolytic disease of the new born?

A

anti-D immunisation with anti-D immunoglobulin

binds to infant cells and prevents mother from raising antibodies

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2
Q

What is erythropoiesis controlled by?

A

erythropoietin - polypeptide hormone

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3
Q

What releases erythropoietin and when?

A

peritubular cells in kidney in response to hypoxia (low O2)

eg. anaemia, at altitude, COPD

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4
Q

What does erythropoietin do?

A

increases number of stem cells committed to erythropoiesis

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5
Q

What is recombinant erythropoietin (EPO) used for?

A

clinically: treat anaemias associated with renal failure

open to abuse by athletes - increase blood viscosity

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6
Q

What is a reticulocyte?

A

immature RBC

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7
Q

What happens to reticulocytes during erythropoiesis?

A

maturation
nucleus extruded and taken up by bone marrow macrophages
mRNA in reticulocyte allows Hb to still by synthesised
increase in reticulocyte = increase in EPO and erythropoiesis

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8
Q

Life span of RBC

A

120 days

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9
Q

Structure of haemoglobin

A

tetrametric: 4 globin chains
haem: ferrous iron (Fe2+) at centre of protoporphyrin complex
globin chains linked by non-covalent bonds, each are a polypeptide with haem prosthetic group

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10
Q

Structural difference between adult and fetal Hb

A

adult: α2β2 subunits
fetal: α2γ2

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11
Q

Stages of iron metabolism

A

Fe3+ reduced to ferrous iron (Fe2+) by stomach acis
Fe2+ -> Fe3+ produced by mucosal cells of duodenum binds to apoferritin to produce ferritin
release iron into blood with transferrin
delivers iron to bone marrow
iron in Hb

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12
Q

Role of ferritin

A

stores iron and releases it in a controlled fashion

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13
Q

Role of transferrin

A

deliver iron from absorption centers in the duodenum and white blood cell macrophages to all tissues

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14
Q

When is iron uptake in the guts increased?

A

when iron deficient

erythroid regulator from bone marrow and iron stores regulator involved

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15
Q

How is O2 transported in the blood?

A

RBCs carry O2 from lungs to tissues

4 O2 per Hb, bind to Fe2+

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16
Q

Describe oxygen dissociation curve

A

sigmoidal curve
low ppO2 - low O2 sat, high dissociation
high ppO2 - high O2 sat, low dissociation

17
Q

How does a fetal dissociation curve differ to an adult one?

A

much steeper

much higher association of O2 at lower pp, fetal Hb has much higher affinity for O2

18
Q

Describe the Bohr effect

A

acidity enhances release of O2 from Hb
increasing Co2 at constant pH lowers Hb O2 affinity
therefore, O2 more readily given up to metabolically active tissues which produce H+ and CO2
shift to right of normal O2 dissociation curve

19
Q

Effect of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (DPG) on O2 carriage

A

reduces Hb affinity for O2
DPG binds to deoxyhaemoglobin to shift equilibrium, reducing O2 binding
if absent, Hb would yield little O2 to tissues

20
Q

Effect of DPG on fetal Hb

A

no effect as fetal Hb is unable to bind to DPG, therefore have a higher affinity

21
Q

When is DPG increased?

A

arterial O2 chronically reduced, so O2 more readily liberated to tissues
eg. at altitude, severe COPD

22
Q

Why is inhalation of CO dangerous?

A

Hb has a much greater affinity for CO than O2, forming carboxyhaemoglobin
CO-Hb does not readily dissociate and therefore less O2 binding and transported to tissues
tissues starved of O2

23
Q

What is methaemoglobinaemia?

A

rare condition in which the haemoglobin iron is in the oxidised/ferric state (Fe3+) and cannot reversibly bind oxygen
symptoms: cyanosed, anoxia symptoms (dizziness, tachycardia, repiratory distress)

24
Q

Possible causes of methaemoglobinaemia

A

hereditary lack of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, which keeps Hb in reduced state
drugs eg. antimalarials

25
Q

How is CO2 carried in the blood?

A

10% dissolved
30% bound to Hb to form carbaminohaemoglobin
60% as HCO3- (may leave, Cl- enters to maintain resting potential)
CO2 + H2O -> HCO3- + H+
catalysed by carbonic anhydrase in RBC