Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Red cells Men • Hemoglobin (g/l) 140-180 • Hematocrit (%) 40-52 • Red cell count (1012/l) 4.5-6.5 • • • • Women 120-160 36-48 3.9-5.6 Reticulocyte count (%) 0.5-1.5 Mean cell volume (fl) 80-95 Mean corpuscular hemoglobin (pg) 27-33 Mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (gm/dL) 33-37 Red cells pathological conditions: I. decrease in the circulating red cell mass (poss. with structural abnormalities) very common - anaemia II. increase in the circulating red cell mass less common polycythemia =erythrocytosis=polyglobuly reactive – low levels of oxygen in the PB (heart disease, high altitude) neoplastic – polycythemia vera = chronic myeloproliferative disease Anaemia decrease in the total circulating red cell mass (hematocrit, hemoglobin concentration) Classification: A. underlying mechanism blood loss increased destruction decreased production B. morphology of erythrocytes size (micro-, macro-, normocytic) shape (spherocytosis, stomato-,...) color (degree of hemoglobinization: normo- hypo-, hyperchromic) Blood loss •acute or chronic •internal or external Acute • Hypovolemia – shock • Anemia – normocytic normochromic • Shift of water – hemodilution –↓ hematocrite • Compensatory increase of red cell production • Reticulocytes • Chronic • hypochromic sideropenic anemia Iron deficiency anemia • body iron = functional + storage; • F - 2g, M - 6g • 1. Lack in diet, low absorption • 2. Increased requirement • !!!3. Chronic blood loss!!! - GIT, GYN The internal iron cycle Plasma iron bound to transferrin transported to the marrow, transferred to developing red cells, incorporated into hemoglobin. Mature red blood cells released into the circulation, after 120 days ingested by macrophages in RES, iron extracted from hemoglobin, returned to the plasma. PB: ery pale + small BM: erythroid hyperplasia, loss of iron alopecia, koilonychia, atrophy of tongue, gastric mucosa Plummer-Vinson syndrome: siderop.an., atrophic glossitis, esophageal webs Hypochromic microcytic anemia of iron deficiency Small red cells - narrow rim of peripheral hemoglobin. Scattered fully hemoglobinized cells - blood transfusion, Iron deficiency anaemia nail beds pale nails flattened, brittle Iron deficiency anaemia koilonychia nails concave, ridged, brittle Iron deficiency anaemia angular cheilosis fissuring and ulceration Iron deficiency anaemia flattening and loss of papillae bald , fissured tongue Increased destruction =lysis of red cells=hemolysis • • intravascular – rare (mechanical injury – artificial valves or microthrombi, exogenous toxic agents, complement fixation (transfusion of mismatched blood) Extravascular - more common, when red cells considered foreign or less deformable Hemolytic anemia Abnormality: intracorpuscular or extracorpuscular hereditary (intra) or acquired (extra) Hemolytic anemia • premature destruction of red cells • accumulation of the products of the hemoglobin catabolism • BM – increased erythropoiesis, extreme: extramedullary hematopoiesis • PB: reticulocytosis • high bilirubin –gallstones; jaundice, blr in urine • chronic duration: hemosiderosis • splenomgaly Increased destruction of ery=hemolysis I. Intrinsic A. hereditary • membrane – cytoskeleton, lipid synthesis • enzymes – deficiencies - G6PD, glutathione synthetase, pyruvate kinase • hemoglobin - deficient synthesis of globin, structurally abnormal Hb B. acquired • membrane defect: paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria • II. Extrinsic • antibodies, trauma, infection, chemical injury Pathophysiology of hereditary spherocytosis Red cell membrane cytoskeleton Alterations leading to spherocytosis and hemolysis Mutations weakening interactions involving α-spectrin, β-spectrin, ankyrin band 4.2, or band 3 cause the normal biconcave red cell to lose membrane fragments and become spherical spherocytic cells: less deformable than normal, become trapped in the Splenic sinus A red cell squeezing from the red pulp cordsinto the sinus lumen. Note the degree of deformability required for red cells to pass through the wall of the sinus. Hereditary spherocytosis (peripheral smear) anisocytosis and several dark-appearing spherocytes with no central pallor. Howell-Jolly bodies (small dark nuclear remnants) Hereditary stomatocytosis Akanthocytosis Hereditary elliptocytosis Hereditary elliptocytosis Enzyme deficiency: G6PD deficiency effects of oxidant drug exposure (PB) Red cells with precipitates of denatured globin (Heinz bodies) splenic macrophages pluck out these inclusions → "bite cells" Pathophysiology of sickle cell anemia Sickle cell anemia (PB) Splenic remnant in sickle cell anemia Pathogenesis of β-thalassemia major aggregates of unpaired α-globin chains not visible Blood transfusions correct the anemia reduce the stimulus for marrow expansion, but add to systemic iron overload Decreased production disorders of proliferation and differentiation stem cells erythroblasts Impaired: DNA synthesis – B12, folic acid hemoglobin synthesis - heme (lack of iron) - globin others Vitamin B12 absorption Megaloblastic anaemia Acute leukaemia Megaloblastic anaemia pernicious lemon-yellow appearance pallor (anaemia) + jaundice (ineffective erythropoiesis) Pernicious anaemia (38 ys.) premature greying, blue eyes, vitiligo Megaloblastic anaemia spontaneous bruising Pernicious anaemia spinal cord demyelination Stomach normal atrophy - pern. an. Coeliac disease - jejunum normal villi subtot. villous atrophy Aplastic anemia Markedly hypocellular marrow contains mainly fat cells. Raynaud phenomenon autoimmnune haemolytic anaemia Sideroblastic anaemia (Perl´s stain) collars of iron granules around the nucleus Anemia of chronic disease *Infections *immunologic *neoplasms Mechanism: defect in reutilization of iron (transfer, cytokines] ! abundant storage iron Anemia: normo, normo or hypo, micro Aplastic anemia • Failure or suppression of myeloid stem cell • PANCYTOPENIA • primary OR secondary - drugs , chemicals infections irradiation inherited BM: hypocellular, PB: pancytopenia, symptoms spleen normal Fanconi anemia AR, defective DNA repair anomalies – bones, kidney, spleen Pure red cell aplasia • Isolated absence of red cell precursors acute drug, virus aplastic crisis OR insidious thymoma Other forms of marrow failure • Myelophthisic an. - space occupying lesions (meta, TBC] • diffuse liver disease, chronic renal failure