WBCs Flashcards

(17 cards)

1
Q

What should you do if the WBC count is too high or too low?

A

Order a WBC differential (super important—do this before you call a hematology consult)

  • This will tell you the distribution and number of the different kinds of WBCs.
  • An elevation of a line of WBCs can be malignant (leukemia) or reactive (and sometimes reactive to a different malignancy that is NOT a leukemia)
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2
Q

CML is a disease characterised by an elevation in _____ count, caused by an abnormal ____ in the bone marrow.

A

CML is a disease characterised by an elevation in neutrophil count, caused by an abnormal clone in the bone marrow.

(Remember P vera can also lead to an elevation in neutrophil count)

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3
Q

What can cause an elevated neutrophil count?

A

•CML (here, the neutrophils are made by an abnormal clone in the bone marrow). Also P vera.

•Physiologic - exercise, pregnancy, lactation, neonates

•Acute infections

•Acute inflammation

  • Acute hemorrhage
  • Non hematologic malignancies
  • Post-splenectomy
  • Drugs: corticosteroids, G-CSF, lithium
  • Misc: seizures, electric shock, post-splenectomy, Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency (they like to ask this one on boards)
  • Smoking is the most common cause of a slightly elevated neutrophil count
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4
Q

How is the neutrophil count affected by corticosteroids?

A

Elevates neutrophil count.

Most neutrophils are on in the periphery on the margins of the tissues. Steroids make them let go and release into the bloodstream - looks like an elevation in total body neutrophil count, but it’s actually just more in the blood vs. on the tissues.

This also makes the neutrophils a little less effective at fighting infections.

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5
Q

_____ is the most common cause of an increased neutrophil count

A

Smoking

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6
Q

Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency is characterized by a(n) ____ (increase/decrease) in neutrophil count

A

increase

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7
Q

What can cause a low neutrophil count?

A

•Physiologic - in African-Americans

•Drugs - esp. remember anti-psychotics, anti-epileptics, anti-thyroid, and some antibiotics

•Chemotherapeutic agents

  • Infections: viral, overwhelming bacterial sepsis, TB, fungal
  • Immune - lupus, rheumatoid arthritis
  • Familial
  • Hypothyroidism, hypopituitarism
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8
Q

Define agranulocytosis:

A

This is the complete or near-complete absence of neutrophils in the peripheral blood, with a normal platelet count and hemoglobin.

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9
Q

How do patients develop agranulocytosis?

A

•Almost always drug-induced:

  • Clozapine (Clozaril®) (and other newer antipsychotics)
  • Propythiouracil (antithyroid)
  • Anti-convulsants
  • Sulfa and chloramphenicol antibiotics
  • Levamisol-contaminated cocaine
  • Causes severe necrotizing ulcers in the mouth and throat
  • Severe risk for life-threatening infection
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10
Q

What is the differential diagnosis for elevated eosinophil count?

A

“NAACP”:

  • Neoplasm,
  • Allergy/asthma,
  • Addison’s disease, Athero-embolic disease
  • Collagen vascular disease
  • Parasites
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11
Q

What is Addison’s Disease?

A

Addison’s disease is a lack of endogenously produced corticosteroids, which normally kill eosinophils. Thus your eosinophil count rises.

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12
Q

Differential diagnosis of Basophilia:

A

•Hypersensitivity reactions

•Myeloproliferative disorders

•Thyroid disease

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13
Q

Differential diagnosis of lymphocytosis:

A

•Viral infections

•Bacterial infections - whooping cough (pertussis), TB, syphilis, brucellosis

•Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)

•Lymphomas and Waldenstrom’s macroglobulinemia

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14
Q

Differential diagnosis of Lymphopenia:

A

Immunodeficiencies, including HIV/AIDS

•Immunosuppresive drugs, including corticosteroids

•Lymphomas

•Granulomatous diseases, including sarcoid, TB

•Alcoholism, malnutrition, zinc deficiency

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15
Q

Differential diagnosis of monocytosis:

A
  • Bacterial infex: TB, syphilis, subacute bacterial endocarditis, typhoid, brucellosis
  • Protozoal infex: malaria
  • Rickettsial infex: RMSF, typhus

•Myelodysplastic syndromes

  • Leukemias
  • Inflammatory bowel disease
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16
Q

Important (4) inherited neutrophil abnormalities:

A
  • Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency
  • Chronic Granulomatous Disease
  • Myeloperoxidase Deficiency
  • Chediak Higashi Syndrome
17
Q

Acquired defects in neutrophil function:

A

•Corticosteroid Use

•Alcoholism

•Leukemias

•Myelodysplasia

•Myeloproliferative disorders

(ALL GREEN)