Paediatric haematology Flashcards

1
Q

what is different about children?

A

Different physiology
Developing organs
Fetal blood production and changes at birth
Maternal factors influencing neonates

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2
Q

describe the difference between adult and foetal Hb

A

Adult Hb is mainly made up of HbA- alpha and beta chains

Foetal Hb is made up of alpha and delta chains until after birth- haemoglobin switching occurs after birth

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3
Q

when is platelet level in foetus

A

end of 1st trimester

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4
Q

describe normal RBC/Hb changes in 3rd trimester

A

Rising Hb and MCV
Transfer maternal iron stores (late)
HbF – relative hypoxia in utero
Until end of 3rd trimester mother gives iron to the baby, which leads to apparent polycythaemia and high MCV
The HbF in utero causes relative hypoxia- which is fine in a foetus bc the mother is providing the oxygen, however at birth more oxygen is needed so the BM changes and switches to production of HbA

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5
Q

describe normal RBC/Hb changes at birth

A
More oxygen to tissues
Air not placenta
HbA production
Switch off HbF production
Initially after birth, there is low Hb because the bone marrow needs time to adjust, but gradually as the bone marrow picks up, so does the Hb concentration
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6
Q

describe normal RBC/Hb changes from 8-12 weeks

A

Reach Hb nadir 8-12 weeks
Hb 90-110g/L
Start making RBC again

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7
Q

how are prem babies physiologically different in general?

A

Small spleens
Red cells are resistant to osmotic lysis
Red cells have altered shape

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8
Q

how are prem babies born at 28 weeks or less physiologically different?

A

Marked macrocytosis
Plentiful nucleated red cells- less efficient at carrying oxygen
Can see oxidative haemolysis 4-6 weeks of age
Short-lived acquired deficiency of red cell enzymes e.g. G6PD

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9
Q

causes of anaemia of prematurity (5)

A

lower baseline Hb

shortened RBC
survival- BM cant keep up

lower iron stores–Don’t get the maternal transfer of iron

rapid weight gain- increased RBC mass

iatrogenic blood sampling

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10
Q

ways to treat anaemia of prematurity

A

iron supplements

delayed cord clamping to allow as much maternal blood to reach the baby and deposit iron as possible

rationalise blood tests

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11
Q

causes of non-physiological anaemia

A
haemolysis:
COMMONEST
Immune
Congenital:
Enzyme
Membrane
Sepsis
blood loss:
In utero
During delivery
Birth trauma
Blood sampling
decreased production:
Rare
Pavrovirus
DBA – usually presents later
Occ other infections
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12
Q

how to evaluate anaemia

A
Baby:
Gestational age & time of onset
Jaundice
Hepatosplenomegaly
Cephalohaematoma
O2 req/ tachycardia
Mum:
Blood group + RBC alloantibody status
FH of (mum/dad)
Neonatal jaundice
Splenectomy
RBC transfusion

Laboratory Investigations

FBC, retic, DAT, film, blood group
Maternal Ab screen
Kleihauer: unexpected severe anaemia without jaundice
Cranial USS if blood loss w/o cause
Parvovirus PCR + maternal serology if reticulocytopaenia

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13
Q

prevention and management of HDN

A

Prevention of alloimmunisation

Early identification of alloimmunisation
Maternal Antibody screening
Threshold for FMU: anti-D >4IU/dL, anti-c >7.5 IU/dL, any Kell

Management of fetal complications
Risk of baby being affected
Monitoring for anaemia – MCA peak systolic velocity >1.5N
Intrauterine transfusion
Timing of delivery

Management of neonatal complications

Counselling regarding future pregnancies & transfusions

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14
Q

3 types of RBC membrane disorder

A

Hereditary spherocytosis
Hereditary elliptocytosis
Hereditary pyropoikilocytosis

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15
Q

describe G6PD deficiency

A

G6PD protects red cells from damage by oxidative substances
No symptoms unless oxidative stress
Medications, Fava beans

Affects about 400 million people worldwide
X-linked recessive inheritance
Africans
Mediterranean Groups

May present with neonatal jaundice

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16
Q

clinical features of G6PD deficiency

A
Maybe asymptomatic
Symptoms:
Anaemia, jaundice, dark/tea-coloured urine
Splenomegaly
Persistent neonatal jaundice
Symptoms resolve once trigger removed
17
Q

treatment of G6PD deficiency

A

Removal of trigger
treating illness or infection
discontinuing drug
Severe anaemia may require blood transfusion

18
Q

causes of blood loss in foetus

A
Cephalohaematoma
Subgaleal bleed
IVH
Organ rupture
Placenta praevia Placental abruption 
feto-maternal
twin-twin
cord problem
19
Q

what is the Kleihauer test

A

Baby can bleed into the maternal circulation- tested for by Kleihauer test: foetal Hb is more resistant to acid and alkaline changes than adult Hb

20
Q

when is platelet count abnormal

A

<150 x10(9)

21
Q

what is megakaryopoiesis useful for

A

to differentiate between early onset (< 72 hours of age) and delayed onset (> 72 hours of age)

22
Q

foetal causes of thrombocytopenia

A

Alloimmune
Congenital infections
Aneuploidy

Severe haemolytic disease
Inherited thrombocytopaenia
Maternal autoimmune

23
Q

causes of early onset thrombocytopenia

A

Prematurity
Sepsis
Perinatal or congenital infections

Chronic fetal hypoxia
Perinatal asphyxia

Alloimmune / Autoimmune

Inherited: TAR, CAMT
Metabolic e.g. MMA

24
Q

causes of late onset thrombocytopenia

A

NEC

sepsis

25
Q

describe the development of alloimmune thrombocytopenia (FNAIT)

A

Paternal platelet antigen on fetal platelets

Fetal platelets enter maternal circulation

Maternal platelets do not express the antigen = looks foreign

Mother makes antibody against antigen = alloimmunisation

IgG antibody crosses placenta

Fetal thrombocytopaenia +/- bleeding

26
Q

questions to ask when taking a history for neutropenia

A

?history of severe infection ± hospitalisation
?cyclical pattern of infections
?dysmorphic features
?medications

27
Q

causes of neutropenia

A
Transient myelosuppression (infection induced)
Autoimmune neutropaenia
Cyclic neutropaenia
Drug-related
Severe congenital neutropaenia
nutritional deficiencies
28
Q

how are babies different with regards to clotting?

A

Procoagulant factors
Reduced vitamin K dependent factors (II, VII, IX, X)
Normal: FV, FVIII, FXIII, VWF

Anticoagulant factors
Reduced Protein C,
protein S, anti-thrombin

Fibrinolytic factors
Reduced plasminogen