1 / 38

Approach to Anemia - Summary

Approach to Anemia - Summary. Approach to Anemia – Case 1. 37 year old female patient of Caucasian origin referred to the Emergency Room because of anemia Medical background: generally healthy, normal diet; during the last week treated with an antibiotic

venus
Télécharger la présentation

Approach to Anemia - Summary

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. Approach to Anemia - Summary

  2. Approach to Anemia – Case 1 • 37 year old female patient of Caucasian origin referred to the Emergency Room because of anemia • Medical background: generally healthy, normal diet; during the last week treated with an antibiotic because of suspected pharyngitis • Complains of weakness and low-grade fever

  3. Approach to Anemia – Case 1 • On examination: pallor, slight jaundice; spleen mildly enlarged, soft, tender • No lymphadenopathy, no bleeding tendency, no glossitis • Pulse 100, regular, blood pressure and oxygen saturation normal

  4. Approach to Anemia – Case 1 • Laboratory evaluation - Set I: - Hemoglobin – 7.9 gr% - MCV – 100 - RDW – 17 - WBC – normal - Platelets - normal

  5. Approach to Anemia – Case 1 • Interpretation: macrocytic anemia • Differential diagnosis: - Megaloblastic anemia - Hemolytic anemia - Myelodysplastic syndrome/Aplastic anemia - Other

  6. Approach to Anemia – Case 1 • Laboratory evaluation - Set II: - Reticulocytes –14% - Corrected reticulocyte count: /%Retics X (measured to the expected Hb ratio)/ 14% x 7.9/15 = 7.4% - Reticulocyte Production Index (RPI): /Corrected reticulocyte count/shift correction factor/ 7.4 / 2 = 3.7 (>2)

  7. Approach to Anemia – Case 1 • Interpretation: hyperproliferative anemia • Differential diagnosis: -Megaloblastic anemia? No - Myelodysplastic syndrome/Aplastic anemia? No - Hemolytic anemia? Yes

  8. Approach to Anemia – Case 1 • Laboratory evaluation - Set III: - LDH – high - Bilirubin – high (unconjugated) - Haptoglobin – low • Diagnosis confirmed: Hemolytic anemia

  9. Approach to Anemia – Case 1 • Hemolytic anemia – differential diagnosis: - Intra-corpuscular (hemoglobinopathy, enzymopathy) - Red cell membrane (cytoskeleton, PNH, spur cell anemia) - Extra-corpuscular (hypersplenism, mechanic hemolysis, immune hemolysis, toxic/infectious agents)

  10. Approach to Anemia – Case 1 • Laboratory evaluation - Set IV: Blood smear - Anisocytosis (high RDW) - Polychromasia (reticulocytosis) -Spherocytes? - Ellyptocytes? -Bite cells? - Spur cells? -Schistocytes? - Sickle cells?

  11. Approach to Anemia – Case 1 • Laboratory evaluation – Set V: - Direct anti-globulin (Coombs) test – IgG +3

  12. Approach to Anemia – Case 1 Summary: - Mild splenomegaly, fever, jaundice - Macrocytic anemia - Reticulocytosis - Spherocytosis - Positive direct anti-globulin test Warm-type immune hemolytic anemia, possibly – drug related

  13. Approach to Anemia An approach to anemia is based on asking 3 main questions: 1. MCV? 2. Reticulocyte count? (Bone marrow function) 3. Involvement of additional lineages?

  14. Approach to Anemia • MCV: - Low: Iron deficiency Thalassemia trait Chronic disease Sideroblastic anemia - Normal: Iron deficiency (early) Chronic disease Renal failure

  15. Approach to Anemia - High: Megaloblastic anemia Hemolytic anemia MDS / Aplastic anemia Drug-related Hypothyroidism Alcoholism Liver disease

  16. Approach to Anemia • Reticulocyte count: - Adequte (RPI>2): Hemolytic anemias (most) Acute blood loss Liver disease - Inadequate (RPI<2): Iron deficiency Megaloblastic anemia Anemia of chronic disease Bone marrow failure (malignancy, chemotherapy, MDS/Aplastic anemia)

  17. Approach to Anemia • Additional lineage(s) involvement: - Leukopenia: Malignancy Chemotherapy Hypersplenism Drug-related Megaloblastic anemia Aplastic anemia

  18. Approach to Anemia - Thrombocytopenia: Malignancy Chemotherapy Hypersplenism Drug-related Megaloblastic anemia Aplastic anemia TTP DIC

  19. Approach to Anemia • In addition, blood smear always needs to be carefully assessed: Schistocytes? Spherocytes? Target cells? Normoblasts? Spur cells (acanthocytes)? Burr cells? Malignant cells (leukemia, lymphoma)? Malaria parasites? Sickle forms?

  20. Anemia With Low MCV and Low Reticulocytes • Iron deficiency • Hereditary defects in hemoglobin synthesis (thalassemia trait) • Defects in heme synthsis (sideroblastic anemia) • Anemia of chronic disease

  21. Anemia With Normal MCV and Low Reticulocytes • Early or mild iron deficiency anemia • Chemotherapy • Anemia of chronic disease • Anemia of renal failure

  22. Anemia with High MCV and Low Reticulocytes • Megaloblastic anemia • Myelodysplastic syndrome / Aplastic anemia • Drug-related anemia • Hypothyroidism • Alcoholism

  23. Anemia with High Reticulocytes • Low MCV: - Thalassemia Major (some cases) - Spherocytosis • High MCV: - Sickle cell anemia - G-6PD deficiency - Immune hemolytic anemia - Malaria infection

  24. Anemia with Leukopenia and/or Thrombocytopenia • Low reticulocytes: - Aplastic anemia/Myelodysplastic syndrome - Chemotherapy - Alcoholism - Megaloblastic anemia • High reticulocytes: - TTP / DIC - Hypersplenism

  25. Approach to Anemia – Case 2 63 year old male patient presented to your clinic with weakness and anemia; generally healthy, no permanent medications. On examination: afebrile, normal pulse and blood pressure. No hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy. Scattered purpura over lower extremities and chest.

  26. Approach to Anemia – Case 2 • Laboratory evaluation - Set I:

  27. Approach to Anemia – Case 2 • Interpretation: macrocyticanemia with thrombocytopenia • Differential diagnosis:

  28. Approach to Anemia – Case 2 • Laboratory evaluation - Set II:

  29. Interpretation: High MCV, Low RPIDifferential Diagnosis: • Megaloblastic anemia • Myelodysplastic syndrome • Aplastic anemia • Drug-related • Alcoholism

  30. Approach to Anemia – Case 2 • Laboratory evaluation - Set III: - B12 and Folate levels Thorough history taking: alcohol? medications?

  31. Approach to Anemia – Case 2 • Laboratory evaluation - Set IV:

  32. Approach to Anemia – Case 2 • Laboratory evaluation - Set V:

  33. Ringed Sideroblast Iron

  34. Approach to Anemia – Case 2 • Summary: - Macrocytic anemia - Thrombocytopenia - Low RPI - Dysplastic maturation (peripheral smear, bone marrow) - Normal B12 and Folate levels Myelodysplastic syndrome

More Related