red cells Flashcards

1
Q

what is the process of RBC differentiation ?

A
  1. haemocytoblast
  2. proerythroblast
  3. erythroblast
  4. normoblast
  5. reticulocyte
  6. erythrocyte
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2
Q

what substances are required for RBC production ?

A

metals - iron, copper, cobalt, manganese
vitamins - B12, folic acid, thiamine, B6, C, E
amino acids
hormones - erythropoietin, GM-CSF, androgens, thyroxine

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3
Q

how are RBCs broken down ?

A

occurs in reticuloendothelial system - macrophages in spleen, liver, nodes
normal RBC life 120 days

globin amino acids are reutilised
haem - iron recycled, haem group becomes bilirubin

bilirubin bound to albumin in plasma

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4
Q

what is hereditary spherocytosis ?

A

autosomal dominant condition

red cells are spherical, get removed from circulation

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5
Q

what structural proteins are defective in hereditary spherocytosis ?

A
ankyrin
alpha spectrin
beta spectrin
band 3
protein 4.2
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6
Q

what is the clinical presentation of hereditary spherocytosis ?

A

anaemia
splenomegaly
pigment gallstones
jaundice - neonatal

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7
Q

what is the treatment of hereditary spherocytosis ?

A

folic acid
transfusion
splenectomy

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8
Q

what are some other rare membrane disorders ?

A

hereditary elliptocytosis
hereditary pyropoikilocytosis
south east asian ovalocytosis

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9
Q

what are the 2 key red cell enzyme systems ?

A

glycolysis - provides energy

pentose phosphate shunt - protects from oxidative damage

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10
Q

what is G6PD ?

A

commonest enzymopathy

X-linked

glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency - protects haemoglobin from oxidative damage
most common in malaria areas

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11
Q

what is seen on blood films of G6PD deficiency ?

A

blister cells

bite cells

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12
Q

how does G6PD present ?

A

variable anaemia
splenomegaly
pigment gallstones
jaundice - neotnatal

drug, broad bean or infection precipitate jaundice or anaemia - haemolysis, haemoglobinuria

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13
Q

what drugs can trigger haemolysis in G6PD deficiency ?

A
antimalarials - quinine
sulphonamides
antibiotics - nitrofuratoin
analgesics - aspirin
antihelminthics - B-naphthol
miscellaneous - vit K, methyl blue
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14
Q

what are other rare enzyme deficiencies ?

A

pyruvate kinase deficiency, reduced ATP, rigid cells

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15
Q

what factors cause Hb to have a lower affinity to O2 ?

A

acidosis
hyperthermia
hypercapnia

HbF has higher affinity for O2 then HbA

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16
Q

what is the makeup for adult haemoglobin ?

A

2 alpha chains - 4 alpha genes Chr16
2 beta chains - 2 beta genes Chr11

2% - HbA2 delta chains
HbF - gamma chains

17
Q

what are the haemoglobinopathies ?

A

thalassaemia - reduced or absent chain production
sickle cell - structurally abnormal Hb

all autosomal recessive

18
Q

what is the makeup of HbS ?

A

2 alpha chains

2 beta sickle chains - point mutation

19
Q

what is the pathophysiology of sickle cell disease ?

A

cells polymerise in response to insult, cation loss, dehydration - haemolysis occurs

endothelial activation, promotion of inflammation, coagulation activation, dysregulation of vasomotor tone

vaso-occlusion

20
Q

what are clinical presentations of sickle cell disease ?

A

painful vaso-occlusive crisis - bone, chest, stroke

increased infection risk - hyposplenism
chronic haemolytic anaemia - gallstones, aplastic crisis
sequestration crisis - liver, spleen

21
Q

how do you treat a sickle cell painful crisis ?

A

analgesia in 30 mins - opiates
avoid pethidine

hydration
O2
antibiotics ?

22
Q

how do you manage sickle cell disease ?

A

life long - vaccine, penicillin prophylaxis, folic acid

acute - hydrate, O2, analgesia, prompt infection treatment, blood transfusion

hydroxycarbamide
bone marrow transplant
gene therapy

23
Q

what is thalassaemia ?

A

reduced or absent chain production
mutations or deletion
either alpha or beta genes

chronic haemolysis and anaemia

24
Q

what are the different types of thalassaemia ?

A

homozygous alpha zero thalassaemia - no alpha chains, hydrops fetalis - incompatible with life

beta thalassaemia major - no beta chains, transfusion dependent anaemia

non-transfusion dependent thalassaemia - range of genotypes

thalassaemia minor - trait/carrier state, hypochromic, microcytic red cells

25
Q

what are features of beta thalassaemia major ?

A
severe anaemia 
presents 3-6 months
expansion of ineffective bone marrow
bony deformities
splenomegaly 
growth retardation

life expectancy without regular treatment <10 years

26
Q

how do you treat beta thalassaemia major ?

A

chronic transfusion 4-6 weekly
normal growth and development
iron overloading can cause death in 2nd/3rd decade if untreated - iron chelation therapy

27
Q

what are rare defects in haem synthesis ?

A

defect in mitochondrial steps of haem synthesis results in sideroblastic anaemia
ALA synthase mutations
hereditary
acquired form of myelodysplase

defects in cytoplasmic steps result in prophyrias