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Red Blood Cell & Bleeding Disorders Normal Normal Bone Marrow *** Bone marrow aspirates & Biopsy specimens Points need to know about Bone Marrow • • • • • What is it? Location : Composition: How to obtain it? Why it is done? Peripheral Blood Serum Or Plasma Cells RBC WBC Platelets Peripheral Blood Serum or plasma Buffy coat Hematocrit ( PCV) or Red cell volume Points need to know about peripheral Blood • Difference between serum and plasma? • What is Buffy coat made up of? • ? Hematocrit or PCV ( packed Cell Volume) • How to know the functional status of marrow by looking at peripheral blood? Adult Reference Ranges-Red Blood Cells Measurement (units) Men Women Hemoglobin (gm/dL) 13.6-17.2 12.0-15.0 Hematocrit (%) 39-49 33-43 Red cell count (106/μL) 4.3-5.9 3.5-5.0 Reticulocyte count (%) 0.5-1.5 Mean cell volume (μm3) MCV 82-96 Mean corpuscular hemoglobin (pg) MCH 27-33 Mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (gm/dL) - MCHC 33-37 RBC distribution width RDW 11.5-14.5 Hematopoiesis • Origin hematopoietic stem cells unsettled • Migration of stem cells – – – – Early months – Yolk Sac Third month - Liver Fourth month - Bone marrow By birth – Marrow is the Sole source of blood cells • Up to puberty, entire skeleton - marrow is red & active • By age 18 years – Marrow limited to vertebrae, ribs, sternum, skull pelvis, and proximal epiphyseal regions of the humerus and femur – Remaining marrow yellow, fatty, and inactive • Adults - 50% marrow space is active Clinical significance Premature infant - Hematopoiesis in liver (rarely spleen, thymus & lymph nodes ) Extramedullary Hematopoiesis - Abnormal in the fullterm infant Clinical significance Stem cell dysfunction – Marrow failure (***Aplastic anemias) – Hematopoietic neoplasms (***Leukemias) Diseases distort the architecture Like Metastatic cancer, Granulomatous diseases result in abnormal release of immature precursors into peripheral blood – “Leukoerythroblastosis” – Resulting anemia is called as Myelophthesic anemia Bone Marrow Morphology • Bone marrow aspirates • Biopsy specimens – Marrow activity - ratio of hematopoietic elements to fat cells • Normal - ratio is about 1:1 • Decreased - hypoplasia - Aplastic anemia • Increased - hematopoiesis - hemolytic anemias, Leukemias Bone Marrow • • • • 65% - granulocytes and their precursors; 25% - erythroid precursors 10% - lymphocytes and monocytes & their precursors Myeloid : Erythroid ratio – 2:1 to 3:1 – Myeloid - myelocytes, metamyelocytes, & granulocytes – Erythroid - polychromatophilic & orthochromic normoblasts Clinical significance of M:E Increased: in Myeloid Leukemia Decreased: in Anemias, *** Polycythemia Pathology Red cell disorders Anemias ↓red cell mass Polycythemia ↑ red cell mass Anemias ↓red cell mass ↓ Blood Loss Hemolytic ↓Erythropiesis B12, Folate, Iron Anemias ↓red cell mass Blood Loss Acute Chronic Blood Loss • A) Acute Blood Loss – ***Earliest change in the peripheral blood -leukocytosis – Reticulocytosis, reaching 10% to 15% after 7 days (what is normal count?) – Early recovery accompanied by Thrombocytosis • B) Chronic Blood Loss – Regardless of underlying cause -Iron deficiency anemia (IDA) Anemias ↓red cell mass Hemolytic Membrane defect HS, PNH Enzyme defect G6PD Defective Hemoglobin Synthesis HbS, Thal, Immune Trauma HEMOLYTIC ANEMIAS • Based on cause – Hereditary disorders are due to intrinsic defects – Acquired disorders to extrinsic factors (like autoantibodies) • Based on site of lysis – Intravascular hemolysis is manifested by (1) Hemoglobinemia, (2) Hemoglobinuria, (3) Jaundice (4) Hemosiderinuria. • Decreased serum haptoglobin is characteristic of intravascular hemolysis. – Extravascular hemolysis • Anemia, jaundice, Splenomegaly. HEMOLYTIC ANEMIAS • Morphology – Marrow– Erythroid Hyperplasia increased numbers of erythroid precursors (normoblasts) – Extramedullary Hematopoiesis – Peripheral blood– Reticulocytosis, schistocytes (Fragmented RBC) • In chronic cases– Hemosiderosis- why? – Pigment gallstones (cholelithiasis) – why? 1. Hereditary Spherocytosis (HS) • Prevalence - Northern Europe • Genetics - Autosomal dominant (AD) in three fourths of cases – The MCC of Autosomal dominant HS - Ankyrin mutation – The MC protein deficient in HS - Spectrin • The most outstanding morphologic finding - Spherocytes • Abnormally small, dark-staining (hyperchromic) • Red cells lacking the normal central zone of pallor • Not pathognomonic Hereditary Spherocytosis (HS) Hereditary Spherocytosis (HS) Hereditary Spherocytosis (HS) • Cholelithiasis (pigment stones) occurs in 40% to 50% of adults. • Splenomegaly -Moderate (500 to 1000 gm); what is the normal weight of spleen? • Clinical Course • I. characteristic features • Anemia, Splenomegaly and jaundice • ii. Aplastic crisis– How you know - sudden worsening of the anemia accompanied by reticulocytopenia – Cause -*** parvovirus infection, infects and kills red cell progenitors – Lifespan of red cells in HS is shortened to 10 to 20 days, • iii. Hemolytic crises – – What you see - increased splenic destruction of red cells (e.g., infectious mononucleosis); Hereditary Spherocytosis (HS) • Diagnosis of HS – – Family history, – Hematological findings, – Laboratory evidence • Osmotic lysis, – ↑ mean cell hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) • Rx: - splenectomy is often beneficial 2. Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria • Only hemolytic anemia caused by an acquired intrinsic defect in the cell membrane • results from acquired (somatic) mutations in phosphatidylinositol glycan A (PIGA) - essential for the synthesis of the GPI anchor • GPI-linked proteins inactivate complement (mutations of these proteins uncontrolled complement activation) • complement mediated lysis of Red cells, white cells, and platelets Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria • Three GPI-linked proteins mutated / deficient in PNH – decay-accelerating factor (DAF) or CD55; – membrane inhibitor of reactive lysis, or CD59; (is the most important in PNH) – C8 binding protein Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria Clinical manifestations • Venous thrombosis, (hepatic, portal, or cerebral veins-fatal in 50% of cases) – prothrombotic state is due to Dysfunction of platelets • ↑risk of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) Rx. immunosuppression 3. Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency • Basic defect – Inability of red cells to protect themselves against ***oxidative injuries – Leading to hemolytic disease – Abnormalities in the hexose monophosphate shunt or glutathione metabolism Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency • Variants – G6PD B Normal variant – G6PD A- 10% of African Americans – G6PD Mediterranean-clinically significant hemolytic anemias • Protective effect against Plasmodium falciparum malaria • X- Linked recessive – Males at highest risk Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency Clinical patterns1. Foods- fava beans (favism), 2. Medications - ***antimalarials (e.g., primaquine and chloroquine), sulfonamides, nitrofurantoins, 3. Infections- viral hepatitis, pneumonia, and typhoid fever Hemolysis causes both intravascular and Extravascular lysis • after exposure to oxidant stress Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency Lab• Peripheral blood – Heinz bodies. -denatured Hb (RBC stained with crystal violet) – "bite cells" – Spherocytes Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency Features of chronic hemolytic anemias (splenomegaly, cholelithiasis) are absent 4. Sickle Cell Disease Basic defect • production of defective hemoglobinshereditary hemoglobinopathy • sickle hemoglobin (HbS) -point ***(splicing) mutation at the sixth position of the β-globin chain • substitution of a valine residue for a glutamic acid residue Sickle Cell Disease • Incidence – 8% of black Americans are heterozygous for HbS- (40% of the hemoglobin is HbS) – In Africa, 30% of the native population are heterozygous. • Advantages – Protection against falciparum malaria Sickle Cell Disease • Mechanism of Sickling – deoxygenated, HbS molecules undergo aggregation and polymerization – Sickling-initially a reversible – precipitation of HbS fibers also causes oxidant damage, not only in irreversibly sickled cells but also in normal-appearing cells – sickle red cells - abnormally sticky Sickle Cell Disease • Most important factors affect the rate and degree of Sickling – Promotes Sickling • Amount of HbS • HbC • Decrease in pH • intracellular dehydration • length of time red cells are exposed to low oxygen tension (spleen and the bone marrow microvascular beds ) – Inhibit Sickling • Co-exists α- Thalassemia • HbA & HbF Sickle Cell Disease • Pathogenesis of microvascular occlusions – reversibly sickled cells express higher than normal levels of adhesion molecules and appear abnormally sticky in certain assays – plasma hemoglobin (released from lysed RBC) binds to and inactivates NO Sickle Cell Disease • Morphology. • Expansion of the marrow – prominent cheekbones – skull X-ray- crew-cut appearance • children during early phase -splenomegaly • adolescence / adulthood -autosplenectomy • Infarction also seen in bones, brain, kidney, liver, retina, and pulmonary vessels (producing cor pulmonale - ?) • leg ulcers in adult patients (rare in children) • pigment gallstones Sickle Cell Disease • Clinical Course • infection with encapsulated organisms, pneumococci and Haemophilus influenzae – Septicemia and meningitis -MCC of death in children • Vaso-occlusive crises- also called pain crises (MCC of morbidity and mortality) – episodes of hypoxic injury and infarction (MC sites - bones, lungs, liver, brain, spleen, and penis) – In children, painful bone crises • extremely common • DD- acute osteomyelitis – hand-foot syndrome – acute chest syndrome • slow pulmonary blood flow • "spleenlike," lungs Sickle Cell Disease • Aplastic crises- parvovirus B19 • Sequestration crises - children with intact spleens • Chronic tissue hypoxia – Renal medulla • hyposthenuria (inability to concentrate urine) • ↑ propensity for dehydration and its attendant risks • Diagnosis – Suggested by -sickle cells in peripheral blood smears – Confirmed by -Hemoglobin electrophoresis Sickle Cell Disease • Prenatal diagnosis – amniocentesis or chorionic biopsy • Rx. Hydroxyurea • increase in the concentration of HbF • anti-inflammatory agent by inhibiting the production of white cells • increases the mean red cell volume • oxidized by heme groups to produce NO • reduce pain crises in children and adults 5.Thalassemia Syndromes Genetic disorders leading to decreased synthesis of either the α- or β- globin chain of HbA • hematologic consequences are due to – low intracellular hemoglobin hypochromia – relative excess of unimpaired chain membrane damage Thalassemia Syndromes β-Thalassemias • ↓synthesis of β-globin chains • Molecular Pathogenesis – Adult hemoglobin (HbA) –tetramer of two α chains and two β chains – pair of α-globin genes on chromosome 16 – single β-globin gene on chromosome 11 – β0-thalassemia- total absence of β-globin chains in the homozygous state – β+-thalassemia- reduced (but detectable) β-globin synthesis Thalassemia Syndromes β-Thalassemias • Most are point mutations (unlike α-thalassemia - deletions ) • MC mutations- Splicing mutations Anemia mechanisms – Free α chains precipitate – Form insoluble inclusions& inclusions cause cell membrane damage 1. normoblasts in the marrow undergo apoptosis (ineffective Erythropoiesis) 2. inclusion-bearing red cells escape marrow splenic sequestration both 1 & 2 lead to ? Thalassemia Syndromes β-Thalassemias • ↑Erythropoietin secretion -expanding mass of erythropoietic marrow – impairs bone growth skeletal abnormalities – Extramedullary hematopoiesis (liver, spleen, and lymph nodes) – excessive absorption of dietary iron secondary hemochromatosis Thalassemia Syndromes β-Thalassemias Clinical Syndromes 1. Thalassemia Major – most common in Mediterranean countries (Africa and Southeast Asia) – In USA, highest in immigrants – Anemia manifests 6 to 9 months after birth, (Hb synthesis switches from HbF to HbA) • Hemoglobin-3 and 6 gm/dL. Thalassemia Syndromes β-Thalassemias 1. Thalassemia Major peripheral blood smear • marked anisocytosis and poikilocytosis • microcytosis (small size), and hypochromia • Target cells • basophilic stippling • fragmented RBC (Schistocytes) • Reticulocytosis • Normoblasts (nucleated RBC) Thalassemia Syndromes β-Thalassemias 1. Thalassemia Major • HbF - markedly increased (major red cell hemoglobin) • Morphology – major morphologic -expansion of hematopoietically active marrow, facial bones. – "crew-cut" appearance - skull X-rays – Splenomegaly ( up to 1500 gm) – Hemosiderosis and secondary Hemochromatosis Thalassemia Syndromes β-Thalassemias 1. Thalassemia Major • Clinical course – – – Untreated children-growth retardation, die of anemia With Cardiac disease -important cause of death (due to iron load) Only curative therapy -Bone marrow transplantation • Prenatal diagnosis – possible Thalassemia Syndromes β-Thalassemias • Thalassemia Minor – much more common than thalassemia major offer resistance against falciparum malaria • peripheral blood – hypochromia, microcytosis, basophilic stippling, and target cells – bone marrow-Mild erythroid hyperplasia • best confirmatory test -Hemoglobin electrophoresis – HbF - normal or slightly increased – HbA2 - 4% to 8% of the total hemoglobin (normal HbA2:- 2.5% ± 0.3%) Thalassemia Syndromes α-Thalassemias • normally four α-globin genes • severity varies with the number of αglobin genes affected • free β and γ chains are more soluble than free α chains Thalassemia Syndromes α-Thalassemias 1. Silent Carrier State – single α-globin gene is deleted – insufficient to result in anemia – completely asymptomatic 2. α-Thalassemia Trait – deletion of two α-globin genes – clinical picture identical to β-thalassemia minor – small red cells (microcytosis), minimal or no anemia, and no abnormal physical signs Thalassemia Syndromes α-Thalassemias 3. Hemoglobin H Disease – mostly in Asian populations (rarely in African ) – only one normal α-globin gene – moderately severe anemia 4. Hydrops Fetalis – most severe form of α-thalassemia – deletion of all four α-globin genes – evident by- third trimester of pregnancy – excess γ-globin chains form tetramers (hemoglobin Barts) has high affinity for oxygen & no oxygen to tissues – fetus - severe pallor, generalized edema, and massive Hepatosplenomegaly (similar to in erythroblastosis fetalis) What is this? 6. Immunohemolytic Anemia • Causes - extra corpuscular mechanisms • Diagnosis - Coombs antiglobulin test. 1. Warm Antibody Immunohemolytic Anemia – the most common form (48% to 70%) of immune hemolytic anemia – 50% of cases are idiopathic (primary) – Most causative antibodies are of the immunoglobulin G (IgG) class – antibodies - against Rh blood group antigens – Antigens- penicillin and cephalosporins & Quinidine, α-methyldopa Immunohemolytic Anemia 2. Cold Agglutinin Immunohemolytic Anemia – – IgM antibodies Causes: • • – – Acute - certain infectious disorders Mycoplasma , infectious mononucleosis , cytomegalovirus, influenza virus, HIV Chronic -with certain lymphoid neoplasms or idiopathic Clinical symptoms - pallor, cyanosis of the body parts (Raynaud phenomenon) of exposed to below 30°C temp. (fingers, toes, and ears ) Immunohemolytic Anemia 3. Cold Hemolysin Hemolytic Anemia • • • • • • • Also called paroxysmal cold hemoglobinuria intravascular hemolysis - with hemoglobinuria, after exposure to cold temperatures complement dependent IgGs (Ab) - bind to P blood group antigen on the red cell surface at low temperatures Donath-Landsteiner antibody Mycoplasma pneumonia, measles, mumps, and ill-defined viral and "flu" syndromes. first recognized with syphilis Hemolytic Anemia Resulting from Trauma to Red Cells 1.cardiac valve prostheses (artificial mechanical valves ) 2. narrowing or obstruction of the microvasculature – – • • Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MCC is DIC) Other causes -malignant HTN, SLE, TTP, HUS, disseminated cancer common feature -mechanicalRBC injury Schistocytes , "burr cells," "helmet cells," and "triangle cells" Anemias ↓red cell mass ↓Erythropiesis Megaloblastic B12,Folate, Iron deficiency Anemia of Chronic disease Aplastic anemia Pure red cell aplasia Others Red cell disorders Anemias ↓red cell mass Polycythemia ↑ red cell mass Secondary/Reactive Primary /Idiopathic/Vera Bleeding disorders Vascular abnormalities Platelet disorders Clotting factor abnormalities DIC Bleeding disorders Platelet disorders ↓production ↑destruction Primary/Idiopathic ITP Sequestration Hypersplenism Secondary