1 / 30

Hemolytic Anemia

Hemolytic Anemia. Hemolysis – Premature destruction of red blood cells Normal life span is 120 days-metabolic decay and loss of membrane flexibility lead to removal Hemolysis may be due to factors; in the intravascular environment or on or within the red blood cells. Spleen.

calum
Télécharger la présentation

Hemolytic Anemia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hemolytic Anemia • Hemolysis – Premature destruction of red blood cells • Normal life span is 120 days-metabolic decay and loss of membrane flexibility lead to removal • Hemolysis may be due to factors; in the intravascular environment or on or within the red blood cells.

  2. Spleen • Hypoxic environment • 2-5 μm openings in sinusoids • Trapping-filtering mechanisms remove inclusions resulting in fairly uniform appearance of red cells in the circulation • Splenic reticuloendothelial cells have receptors for Fc and C3b

  3. Mechanisms of Hemolysis • Intravascular – Red Blood Cells lyse in the circulation and release products into the plasma • Extravascular – Destruction of red cells by reticuloendothelial cells in the liver, spleen, and bone marrow-pathway of normal senescence • Both pathways recover heme iron

  4. Intravascular Hemolysis • Red blood cells break down in the circulation • Free hemoglobin; binds to haptoglobin, oxidized to methemaglobin • Heme recovered from haptoglobin, albumin or hemopexin (formed from methemaglobin) • Bilirubin conjugated by hepatocytes, then excreted as urobilinogen and urobilin

  5. Extravascular Hemolysis • RES phagocytosis of RBCs • RBC membrane is disrupted • Lysosomal digestion of hgb • Recovered iron transported to bone marrow • Protoporphyrin metabolized to bilirubin, conjugated and excreted

  6. Clinical Manifestations • Compensated or Symptomatic anemia • Weakness, dizziness • Fever, weight loss, fatigue • Pallor, Icterus, Dark urine • Splenomegaly, Lymphadenopathy

  7. Measures of Hemolysis (1) • Reticulocyte (normal 0.5-2 %), MCV • Serum LDH • Indirect bilirubin • RBC morphology- Spherocytes, Schistocytes Target Cells, Acanthocytes, Sickle Cells, Agglutination, Mixed fields • Erythroid hyperplasia, m:e 1:1 • Chromium RBC survival

  8. Intravascular Hemolysis Decreased haptoglobin and hemopexin(20-40 ml/day) Plasma hgb >50 mg/dl, looks pink Urine-distinguish hgb from myoglobin Methemalbumin elevated (5-10 days) Urinary hemosiderin (7+ days) Extravascular Hemolysis Decreased haptoglobin Normal plasma hemoglobin Increased LDH Ancillary studies Coomb’s tests Hgb /Electrophoresis Membrane /Osmotic fragility Metabolism /G6PD Measures of Hemolysis (2)

  9. Causes - IntravascularHemolysis • ABO mismatched blood transfusion • Cold agglutinin disease • Paroxysmal cold hemoglobinuria • Burns • Snake bites • Bacterial-C.perfringens sepsis • Parasitic infections- F.malaria • Mechanical heart valves • Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria

  10. Causes-Extravascular Hemolysis • Bacterial / Viral infections • Drug induced • Autoimmune • Microangiopathy-Malignancy DIC,TTP,Eclampsia • Hemoglobinopathies • Membranedefects-spherocytosis, elliptocytosis,acanthocytosis • Metabolic defects-G6PD deficiency/ oxidant drugs

  11. Immune Hemolytic Anemia • Immune Hemolysis is mediated by the Ig antibodies that bind to the RBC surface and initiate destruction • RBC destruction may be intravascular or extravascular • Classified as autoimmune, alloimmune, drug induced

  12. Degree of Hemolysis Depends on Antibody Characteristics • Characteristics of Antibody • Class-IgG and C3b recognized by Fc receptors • Subclass IgG1 and IgG3 • Specificity • Thermal Range • Complement Activating Efficiency • Affinity • Direct Coomb’s- Quantity of RBC-Bound IgG &/or Complement • Characteristics of Target Antigen • Quantity of Antigen on Membrane • Distribution of Antigen on Membrane • Presence of antigen in Tissues &/or Body Fluids • Type of Complement present on circulating RBC’s • Activity of Reticuloendothelial System

  13. CLASSICAL PATHWAY ALTERNATIVE PATHWAY C3b activation (DAF-CD55 and MIRL-CD59 inhibition) C3 activation- inhibition overwhelmed Intravascular Hemolysis RES Receptors for C3b, Fc IgG Extravascular Hemolysis

  14. Immunoglobulin Quantity and Hemolysis

  15. Alloimmune Hemolysis • Exogenous antigen exposure-transfusion, pregnancy, transplantation • Serologic immune response • May cause acute or delayed hemolysis • May cause decreased graft survival • May cause hemolytic disease of newborn • May not be clinically significant

  16. Alloimmune Hemolysis (2) • DAT- direct antiglobulin test- IgG and/or C3 present on red blood cells • Indirect antiglobulin test- Serum reacts to red blood cell antigens with specificity • Antibody eluted from red cells has specificity to red cell antigens • Transfused antigen negative cells tolerated

  17. Incidence of Alloimmunization in Chronic Transfusion Patient Populations

  18. Clinical Manifestations of Immediate Hemolytic Transfusion Reactions

  19. Manifestations of Delayed Hemolytic Transfusion Reactions • Clinical • Fevers • Chills • Symptoms of anemia • Jaundice • Oliguria or anuria (uncommon) • Generalized Bleeding (Rare) • Laboratory • Unexplained anemia (or decrease in hemoglobin) • Positive direct antiglobulin test • Hemoglobinemia • Hemoglobinuria (Uncommon) • Hemosiderinuria • Decreased haptoglobin • Responsible antibody in post-transfusion RBC eluate

  20. Immune Hemolysis-Transplantation (1) • Stem cell transplantation-major and minor incompatibility • Acute and delayed hemolysis • Prolonged transfusion support • Graft manipulation to remove red cells and/or plasma

  21. Immune Hemolysis –Transplantation (2) • ABO incompatible heart transplants- hyperacute rejection with immediate graft loss • ABO tolerance in infants prior to isoagglutinin development • Renal transplants- graft survival with aggressive immunosuppression • Liver transplants- increased rejection and biliary complications, minimal acute graft loss

  22. Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia • Classified by thermal reactivity • Warm react near 37 o C, Cold at 0-4 o C • Serologic evidence is positive DAT (direct Coomb’s test) with IgG or C3d present • Indirect Coomb’s test and specificity (serum / eluate) • Diagnostic Criteria- • serologic evidence and laboratory or clinical hemolysis

  23. AIHA Classification • Warm autoimmune hemolytic anemia • Idiopathic, Secondary • (Lymphoproliferative disorders, autoimmune diseases) • Cold autoimmune hemolytic anemia • Cold agglutinin syndrome • (Idiopathic, Secondary- mycoplasma, infectious mono, LPD) • Paroxysmal cold hemoglobinuria • (Idiopathic, Secondary- measles, mumps, syphilis) • Drug-induced IHA • (Autoimmune, Drug adsorption, Neoantigen)

  24. Serological Findings in Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia

  25. Drug-Induced Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia

  26. Drug-Induced Positive Antiglobulin Tests

  27. Treatment AIHA

  28. References: • Gears BC, Friedberg RC. Autoimmune hemolytic anemia. American Journal of Hematology 69:2002: 259-271. • Hillman RS, Ault KA. Hematology in Clinical Practice, 2002 third edition, McGraw Hill, New York, NY. chp 11,Hemolytic Anemias. • Nance ST, ed. Immune Destruction of Red Blood Cells. AABB press, 1989,Arlington,VA • Petz LD, Garratty G. Acquired Immune Hemolytic Anemias. 1980,Churchill Livingstone, New York, NY • www.ashimagebank.org

More Related