95 Megaloblastic Anemia Flashcards

1
Q

Causes of Megaloblastic anemia

A

B12 and Folate deficiency

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2
Q

Enzymes where cobalamin is a co factor

A

L methylmamonyl Co Enzyme A mutase

Methionine synthase

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3
Q

What is daily requirement for colabamin? How much are the body stores?

A

Daily requirements for cobalamin is 1-3 micrograms.

Body stores are at 1-3 mg sufficined to 3-4 years supply

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4
Q

How is cobalamin absorbed and where? Which the normal physiologic mechanism? What mediates this mechanism

A

Passive: buccal, duodenal, ileal; inefficient only 1% absorbed
Active: normal physiologic mechanism; ileum and efficient; mediated by intrinsic factor

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5
Q

Where is intrinsic factor produced?

A

Gastric parietal cell of the fundus and body of stomach

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6
Q

Two amin cobalamin transport protein

A

One HC or TC I

Transcobalamin: TC II

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7
Q

Food with the highest concentration of folate

A
Liver
Yeast
Spinach
Greens
Nut
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8
Q

Largest store of Folate in the body

A

Liver

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9
Q

Total body Folate store. Daily Folate requirement

A

Folate daily requirement 100 mcg

Body stores of Folate 10 mg, stores are only sufficient for 3-4 months

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10
Q

How much of Folate is absorbed from food and where is it absorbed rapidly? Dietary Folate is converted to what? What pH?

A

Only 50% of Folate from food is absorbed rapidly in the upper small intestines
All dietary Folate is converted to 5 methyl tetrahydrofolate (5-MTHF)
Most absorbed happens at pH 5.5

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11
Q

True or false. Pteroylglutamic acid at doses more than 400 mcg is largely absorbed unchanged and converted to natural Folates in liver

A

True.

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12
Q

How much of Folate is bound and unbound?

A

1/3 loosely bound to albumin

2/3 is unbound

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13
Q

3 types of Folate binding protein involved in Folate transport? Which is the major route of delivery to cells?

A
  1. Reduced Folate transporter (RFC): major route
  2. Folate receptor (FR2 and FR2)
  3. PCFT
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14
Q

Universal methyl donor

A

S adenosylmethionine (SAM)

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15
Q

Common feature of all Megaloblastic anemia

A

Defect in DNA synthesis

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16
Q

How does Folate or cobalamin affect DNA synthesis?

A

Either Folate or cobalamin deficiency leads failure to convert dUMP to dTMP.

17
Q

Two reactions in the body that require cobalamin

A

Methylmamonyl CoA isomerization

Methylation of homocysteine to methionine

18
Q

MTHF accumulates in the plasma and Folate concentrations fall because of failure in the formation of THF

A

THF starvation or methylfolate trap

19
Q

Reason for psychiatric disturbance in Folate deficiency

A

Attributed to failure to synthesize SAM which is needed in methylation of biogenic amines

20
Q

Most affected tissues with cobalamin and Folate deficiency

A

Epithelial surfaces of mouth, stomach, small intestines, Respiratory, urinary and female genital tracts

21
Q

When Folic acid supplementation given to reduce neural tube defects

A

Conception to first 12 weeks of pregnancy

22
Q

Protective dose of Folic acid to prevent neural tube defects in pregnancy

A
  1. 4 mg daily
23
Q

Three enzymes defective in severe homocystinuria

A

Methionine synthase
MTHFR
Cystathionine synthase

24
Q

What type of leukemia is prevented with Folic acid supplementation

A

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL)

25
Q

What is the main feature of myeloblastic anemia on peripheral blood

A

Ovalocytes
MCV more than 100 fL
Hypersegmented neutrophils (more than 5 nuclear lobes)

26
Q

What is the bone marrow picture of Megaloblastic anemia

A

Hypercellular with an accumulation of primitive cells due to selective death by apoptosis of more mature forms

27
Q

Defined as severe lack of intrinsic favor due to gastric atrophy

A

Pernicious anemia

28
Q

How much of ileal removal leads to cobalamin Malabsorption

A

Removal of 1.2 M of terminal ileum leads to Malabsorption of cobalamin