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Diseases of blood cells Pharmacology Students د .طارق العديلي الساعات المكتبية :األحد 1-12 عنوان المكتب :مستشفى الجامعة األردنية مبنى العيادات ،الطابق الثالث ،مختبر أمراض الدم Email: [email protected] تلفون 06/5353666فرعي 2645 RBC DISORDERS Anemia • Reduction of total RBC MASS below average levels • Reduction of oxygen carrying capacity of the blood, leads to tissue hypoxia • Practically, measured by Hemoglobin concentration, and Hematocrit (ratio of packed RBCs to total blood volume) Classification of anemia according to cause • Blood loss: acute, chronic • Diminished RBC production • Increased destruction “hemolytic anemia” Clinical features of anemia • • • • • • Dizziness Fatigue Pallor Hypotension Tachycardia Tachypnia Anemia of acute blood loss • Symptoms are related to decreased intravascular volume, might cause cardiovascular shock and death • Body responds by shifting fluid from interstitial to intravascular space, causing dilutional anemia and hypoxia • Erythropoietin secretion is stimulated, activating BM erythropoiesis • Mature RBCs as well as Reticulocytes appear in blood after 5 days • The anemia is normochromic normocytic, with reticulocytosis Anemia of chronic blood loss • Occurs when the rate of RBC loss exceeds regeneration • Usually occurs in GI and gynecologic diseases • Body loses iron in lost RBCs, resulting in iron deficiency anemia lately • Anemia begins normochromic normocytic, then hypochromic microcytic Hemolytic Anemia • Normally, RBCs age is around 120 days, aged RBCs are engulfed by phagocytic cells in spleen • In Hemolytic anemia; premature destruction of RBCs • Accumulation of Hg degradation products (bilirubin), causing jaudince Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency • G6PD reduces nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP) to NADPH while oxidizing glucose-6-phosphate • NADPH neutralizes H2O2 • G6PD deficiency is a recessive X-linked trait, placing males at higher risk for symptomatic disease. The enzyme is deficient (African type) or non-functioning (Mediterranean) Pathogenesis • High levels of oxidants causes the cross-linking of globin chains, which become denatured and form membrane-bound precipitates known as Heinz bodies, stained with crystal violet stain, which tear membrane and causes hemolysis • Splenic macrophages identify Heinz bodies and pluck them out resulting in indentation. The remaining RBC is known as “bite cells” Causes of hemolytic crisis • Hemolysis happens upon exposure to oxidant stress • The most common triggers are: • (1) infections, in which oxygen-derived free radicals are produced by activated leukocytes • (2) Drugs (anti malaria, sulfonamides) • (3) Fava beans (favism) • Hemolysis occurs 2-3 days post exposure, appears as sudden drop in Hg level with pain Thalassemia • The thalassemia syndromes are a heterogeneous group of disorders caused by inherited mutations that decrease the synthesis of adult hemoglobin, HgA (α2β2) • Endemic in Middle East, tropical Africa, India, Asia • β-Thalassemia is caused by deficient synthesis of β chains, whereas α-thalassemia is caused by deficient synthesis of α chains Pathogenesis • RBCs have low content of Hg (hypochromic micocytic) • Persistent tissue hypoxia • Persistent high erythropoietin, (high RBC count, extramedullay erythropoiesis, hepatosplenomegaly) • Unpaired excess chains are insoluble, causing hemolysis • Excessive erythroid precursors in bone marrow, steals oxygen from bone cells, causing bone growth abnormality Morphology of thalassemia • Blood film: hypochromic microcytic anemia, target cells Sickle Cell Anemia • Common in Africa and middle east • AR inheritance • Sickle cell disease is caused by a point mutation in the sixth codon of β-globin that leads to the replacement of a glutamate residue with a valine residue • The abnormal physiochemical properties of the resulting sickle hemoglobin (HbS) are responsible for the disease • Sickle Cell Trait: heterozygosity of HgS, carriers are largely asymptomatic, HgS ≈ 40% • Sickle Cell Disease: homozygosity of HbS, symptomatic, HgS ≈ 80% • Both types of Hg are protective against Malaria falciparum infection Pathogenesis • HbS molecules undergo polymerization when deoxygenated • HbS molecules assemble into long needle-like fibers within red cells, producing a distorted sickle shape, then damages cell membrane and cause intravascular hemolysis • Sickle cells are removed by macrophages, leading to extravascular hemolysis too Pathogenesis • Acidosis, dehydration, hypoxia and infections aggravate cell sickling causing crises • Sickled RBCs can aggregate and occlude capillaries • Occluded vessels results in ischemia and tissue necrosis (vaso-occlusive crisis): • Heart: myocardial infarction • Bone: necrosis, severe pain, aplastic anemia • Lung: acute chest syndrome • Skin: ulcers Diagnosis • Blood film: (sickle cells) ANEMIAS OF DIMINISHED ERYTHROPOIESIS Anemias secondary to inadequate RBC production • Nutritional • Renal failure • Chronic inflammation • Bone marrow failure Iron deficiency anemia • The most common anemia worldwide • Nutritional or blood loss • People at increased risk of anemia are: infants, elderly, teenagers, low socioeconomic class • Iron is stored as ferritin in the bone marrow • IDA develops insidiously, begins with decreased stored ferritin, and lastly the serum iron is decreased • RBCs appear as microcytic and hypochromic, Target cells • Response to iron therapy Megaloblastic anemia • Anemia associated with impairment in DNA synthesis in hematopoietic cells special morphologic features (large immature erythroid precursors) • Two types: Vitamin B12 and folate deficiency • Vitamin B12 and folate are coenzymes required for synthesis of thymidine • Vitamin B12 is essential for myelin synthesis, deficiency causes anemia and neurologic disease Causes of Vit B12 deficiency • Low intake (vegans) • Impaired GI absorption (pernicous anemia, malabsorption disease, gastrectomy) • Pernicious anemia: autoimmune disease, destruction to parietal cells, impaired absorption Causes of folate deficiency • Low intake (inadequate diet, infancy) • Impaired absorption (malabsorption, chronic alcoholism, anti-convulsants, oral contraceptives) • Impaired utilization (methotrexate, Vit B12 deficiency) • Increased demand: pregnancy Morphology • PB: RBCs are large and oval and no central pallor • Reticulocytes are low • Neutrophils are large and have hypersegmented nuclear lobes (5 or more) • BM: Megaloblastic changes in erythroid precursors (large size and immature nucleus despite cytoplasmic maturation) Anemia of Chronic Disease • Most common anemia in hospitalized people • Occurs in chronic inflammatory diseases (infection, autoimmune, cancer) • IL-6 activates the synthesis of Hepcidin in the liver, which suppresses erythropoietin and prevents the transfer of iron to erythroid cells • Anemia is normochromic normocytic, or hypochromic microcytic Aplastic Anemia • Bone marrow fail to produce the 3 cell lines • 60% of cases are idiopathic. The rest are secondary to drugs (chloramphenicol), chemicals (benzene), or autoimmune process POLYCYTHEMIA • increase in hemoglobin concentration and hematochrit • Primary polycythemia (polycythemia vera) is a clonal, neoplastic myeloproliferative disorder • Secondary polycythemia occurs as an Adaptive process (lung disease, high-altitude living, cyanotic heart disease), Paraneoplastic: erythropoietin-secreting tumors (e.g., renal cell carcinoma), or Surreptitious: endurance athletes White blood cell disorders Leukopenia • Neutropenia: occurs as part of aplastic anemia, drug reaction (anti-epileptic, antithyroid, chemotherapy), congenital. Patients develop severe bacterial infections • Lymphopenia is much less common; it is associated with congenital immunodeficiency diseases, advanced human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, and treatment with high doses of corticosteroids Reactive Leukocytosis • An increase in the number of white cells in the blood is common in a variety of inflammatory states caused by microbial and nonmicrobial stimuli Neutrophilia • Infection (bacterial) • Burn • Tissue necrosis (myocardial infarction) Eosinophilia • Allergic reactions • Parasitic infections • Drug reactions Lymphocytosis • Viral infections • Tuberculosis Reactive Lymphadenitis • Any immune response against foreign antigens can lead to lymph node enlargement (lymphadenopathy) Acute lymphadenitis: neutrophilic infiltration (bacterial), painful Chronic lymphadenitis (painless): • HIV • rheumatologic diseases • drug reaction • post vaccination Mimic lymphoma Lymphoma • Malignant tumor of lymphocyte • Most commonly arise from lymph nodes • 1/3 arise in extranodal sites, GI and mediastinum are the most common sites • Malignant lymphocytes may circulate the blood and reach the bone marrow, called lymphoid leukemia • Generally classified as Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphomas • Non-Hodgkin lymphoma is classified as B or T-cell lymphoma, which both are further classified as low or high grade • B-cell lymphomas express CD20 (rituximab) • T-cell lymphomas express CD3 • Hodgkin lymphomas express CD30 (brentuximab) • Patients with lymphoma have disturbed immune system Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia • Low grade B-cell lymphoma • Cells are small, round, mature looking similar to normal lymphocytes, but very high in number • The most common leukemia in elderly Hodgkin Lymphoma • • • • • • Neoplasm of B-cell origin Malignant cells are called Reed-Sternberg cells Giant size, two nuclei Do not express CD20, instead, CD30 common in children and young adults Affects only lymph nodes and mediastinum Acute Leukemia • An aggressive, high-grade neoplasm • Arises from immature cells of the bone marrow, called blast • Acute myeloid leukemia: arises from myeloblasts, that differentiates into WBC, affects all ages • Acute lymphoblastic leukemia: arises from lymphoblasts which differentiate into B or Tlymphocytes, common in children • Patients have high number of WBC in blood and bone marrow, destroying normal cells • Patients present with sudden fever (infection), bleeding and anemia Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia • Low grade leukemia, high number of neutrophils (not blasts) • translocation between chromosomes 9 (ABL gene) and 22 (BCR) • The new chromosome is known as Philadelphia chromosome • The new fusion gene (BCR-ABL) gain a new “Tyrosine-Kinase” function, which activates cell proliferation and prolonged its survival • Imatinib blocks BCR-ABL gene