Hemochromatosis Flashcards

1
Q

How much iron do we absorb and excrete daily

A

1-2 mg/day

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2
Q

How much iron do we typically store in our body

A

3-4 grams
- circulating hemoglobin in RBCs
- iron containing proteins
- iron bound to transferrin
- iron stored as ferritin

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3
Q

What does the TSAT test tell us

A

the amount of transferrin sites bound by iron

(low TSAT = iron deficiency anemia, high TSAT = iron overload)

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4
Q

Describe the storage of iron

A
  • stored by ferritin mostly in hepatocytes
  • inverse relationship with transferrin/TIBC
  • ferritin is an acute phase reactant (high in infection)
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5
Q

Describe how hepcidin deficiency in hereditary hemochromatosis works

A

Low hepcidin = reduced regulation of iron absorption (intestinal enterocyte absorption & hepatic store release) = iron overload

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6
Q

Is there a normal iron loss that can help mitigate too much iron absorption?

A

No
- normal loss of 1mg per day in normal sweat/cell shedding
- normal loss of 1mg/day with menses

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7
Q

Describe the etiology of hereditary hemochromatosis

A
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8
Q

Describe the presentation of hereditary hemochromatosis

A
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9
Q

Describe the diagnostic testing for hemochromatosis

A
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10
Q

Describe the treatment for hereditary hemochromatosis

A
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11
Q

Describe the “bronze diabetes” triad and what disease process it is commonly seen in

A

Bronze diabetes: cirrhosis, DM, skin hyperpigmentation seen in hemochromatosis

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12
Q

What are the complications of hemochromatosis

A

Increased risk of ALS, infection, hepatocellular carcinoma, pseudogout

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13
Q

How many mg of iron are removed in therapeutic phlebotomy for hereditary hemochromatosis

A

approximately 200-250 mg (500 ml/1 pint)

maintenance usually q3-6 mos

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