Haemolytic anaemia Flashcards

1
Q

Define:

A

• Premature erythrocyte breakdown causing shortened erythrocyte life span (< 120 days) with anaemia

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2
Q

What are the two main types:

A

Occurs in the circulation to damaged RBCs (intravascular) or in the reticuloendothelial system i.e. macrophages of liver, spleen and bone marrow remove defective RBCs (extravascular

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3
Q

Aetiology/risk factors:

A

• Hereditary - Membrane Defects (Hereditary spherocytosis + Hereditary elliptocytosis)

Metabolic Defects (G6PD deficiency , Pyruvate kinase deficiency)

Haemoglobinopathies( Sickle cell disease ,Thalassemia)

o Autoimmune (Antibodies attach to erythrocytes causing intravascular and extravascular haemolysis)

Isoimmune( transfusion reaction + Haemolytic disease of the newborn)

o Drugs – cause formation of RBC autoantibodies from…
• Penicillin – binding to RBC membranes
• Quinine – production of immune complexes

o Trauma
• Microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia (caused by RBC fragmentation in abnormal microcirculation – intravascular)
 E.g. haemolytic uraemic syndrome, DIC, malignant hypertension

Infection (Malaria and Sepsis)

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4
Q

What is G6PD?

A

– G6PD is part of the pentose shunt pathway which is designed to protect against oxidants found in drugs, chemicals etc
X-linked
Most common enzyme effect
Must avoid oxidants – broad beans, mothballs, henna

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5
Q

What is pyruvate kinase deficiency:

A

– pyruvate kinase is required at the last stage of glycolysis so deficiency causes RBCs with decreased ATP

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6
Q

Epidemiology:

A

Common

Genetic causes more in Africa and the middle east

Hereditary spherocytosis (most common in europe)

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7
Q

Symptoms:

A
Jaundice 
Anaemia 
Haematuria
FHx
Asymp
Travel 
Dark urine 
Race
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8
Q

Signs:

A

Jaundice
Hepatosplenomegaly
Pallor
Leg ulcers due to poor blood flow

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9
Q

Investigations:

A

o FBC:

o U&Es
o Folate
• Blood Film

• Urine

• Direct Coombs’ Test
o Tests for autoimmune haemolytic anaemia

• Osmotic fragility test or Spectrin mutation analysis
o Identifies membrane abnormalities

Ham’s test
• Hb Electrophoresis or Enzyme Assays
o To exclude other causes
• Bone Marrow Biopsy (rarely performed)

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10
Q

Finding on bloodfilms:

A

o Leucoerythroblastic picture
o Macrocytosis
o Nucleated erythrocytes or reticulocytes
o Polychromasia
o May identify specific abnormal cells pointing to the diagnosis such as:
Hypochromic microcytic anaemia - thalassemia
• Spherocytes – hereditary spherocytosis or AIHA
• Elliptocytes – hereditary elliptocytosis
• Sickle cells – sickle cell anaemia
• Schistocytes - MAHA
• Malarial parasites
• Heinz bodies (‘bite cells’) – G6PD deficiency

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11
Q

What are findings on FBC:

A
  • Low Hb
  • High reticulocytes
  • High MCV
  • High unconjugated bilirubin
  • Low haptoglobin (a protein that binds to free Hb released by red blood cells)
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12
Q

Findings in urine:

A

o High urobilinogen
o Haemoglobinuria
o Haemosiderinuria

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