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Hemolytic Anemias: Intracorpuscular Defects

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Types of Hemolysis
  • Extravascular vs. intravascular sites
  • extracorpuscular vs. intracorpuscular defects
  • hereditary vs acquired disorders
Hemolysis: Clinical features
  • decreased RBC
  • accelerated Hgb breakdown
  • increased bilirubin
  • decreased haptoglobin
  • hemosiderin in kidney tubules
  • increased urobilinogen in urine and feces
  • hemoglobin in urine
Bone marrow response to Hemolysis
  • erythroid hyperplasia
  • skeletal deformities
  • results in following peripheral blood:
    • NRBC
    • increased reticulocytes
    • howell-jolly bodies
Intracorpuscular Defects: Defective RBC membrane
  • Hereditary spherocytosis
  • Hereditary elliptocytosis
  • Hereditary stomatocytosis
  • Hereditary xerocytosis (cremated cells)
Hereditary spherocytosis- Etiology and Clinical features
  • spectrin and ankrin deficiency
  • conditioning of RBCs by spleen
  • age of presentation varies
  • jaundice
  • anemia
  • enlarged spleen
Hereditary spherocytosis: Lab findings
  • hyperbilirubinemia
  • haptoglobin variably reduced
  • no classic signs of intravascular hemolysis
  • increased reticulocytes
  • avg Hgb is 12-13 g/dL
  • MCV and MCH vary
  • MCHC is usually increased above 36%
Hereditary Spherocytosis- Peripheral blood
  • Spherocytes
  • may have A&P before splenectomy
Hereditary Spherocytosis: Lab tests
  • osmotic fragility
  • autohemolysis test
    • sterile incubation of RBCs in own plasma for 48 hrs
    • ATP and GLC needed to keep "leaky" Na+ out of cell (pump)
    • cells are fragile in GLC depletion
    • 10-50% frag
Hereditary Spherocytosis- Treatment
  • Splenectomy
    • deferred until after6 yrs in children to due infection with Strep pneumoniae
Hereditary elliptocytosis- Etiology and clincial features
  • spectrin and/or protein deficiency or dysfunction
  • membrane is weakened in stress
  • most cases are asymptomatic
  • few have traditional symptoms of severe hemolytic anemia (HA)
Hereditary elliptocytosis: Lab findings
  • most cases of HE have a mild, compensated HA with minimal hemolysis
    • slight reticulocytosis
    • decreased haptoglobin levels
    • normal RBC indices
  • many cases show no evidence of a hemolytic process
Hereditary Elliptocytosis: Lab tests
  • osmotic fragility and autohemolysis tests are usually normal in mild cases
  • RBC membrane studies
Hereditary Elliptocytosis: Treatment
  • no treatment necessary
  • more severe cases may require splenectomy
Hereditary Stomatocytosis and hereditary Xerocytosis- Etiology
  • Permeable memb permits cation "leaks" into and out of RBC
    • sodium leaks into cell and potassium leaks out of cell
    • net loss of sodium is higher
    • water enters the cell with sodium and RBCs swell
Hereditary Stomatocytosis and Hereditary Xerocytosis -  Clinical features and Treatment
  • most cases have no severe hemolytic symptoms

  • Hereditary Stomatocytosis treatment:
    • patients with hemolysis respond well to splenectomy
  • Hereditary Xerocytosis treatment:
    • patients do not ben
Hereditary Xerocytosis- Etiology 
  • Permeable memb permits cation "leaks" into and out of RBC
    • net loss of potassium is higher
    • water exits the cell with sodium and RBCs become dehydrated
Hereditary Stomatocytosis: Lab findings
  • increased MCV
  • decreased MCHC
  • macrocytosis
  • stomatocytes (bowl-like)
Hereditary xerocytosis: Lab findings
  • target cells
  • small echinocytes
  • increased MCV
  • increased MCHC
Intracorpuscular Defects: Enzyme Abnormalities
  • G-6-PD deficiency
  • Pyruvate kinase deficiency
  • methemoglobin reductase deficiency
G-6-PD Deficiency- Etiology
  • Enzyme failure to catalyze reactions to reduce glutathione in RBC
  • Glutathione is necessary to protect HGb from oxidative denaturation
  • oxidation results in ppt of irreversilby denatured Hgb (Heinz bodies)
G-6-PD Deficiency -Clinical features
  • many are asymptomatic
  • 2-3 days after offending drug adminstration
    • back pain
    • hemoglobinuria
    • jaundice
    • others present with more severe hemolytic symptoms
G-6-PD Deficiency- lab findings
  • 2-3 days after offending drug adminstration
    • decreased RBC
    • decreased Hgb
    • normocytic, normochromic anemia
  • severe hemolytic reactions
    • decreased Hgb and Hct
    • hemoglobinuria (brown to black):
G-6-PD Deficiency- lab tests
  • Heinz body staining (screen)
  • G-6-PD assay to determine true deficiency
Pyruvate Kinase Deficiency- Etiology
  • deficiency causes decreased ATP production in Embden-Meyerhof pathway
    • leads to cell water loss and shrinkage
    • distortion of cell shape
    • increased memb rigidity
  • Abnormal cell types are destroyed by spleen and
Pyruvate Kinase Deficiency- Clinical features
  • severe cases are jaundiced at birth
  • lesssevere diagnosed at childhood or young adult
Pyruvate Kinase Deficiency- lab findings
  • Less severe cases
    • normocytic, normochromic anemia
    • varying reticulocytosis
  • more severe cases
    • decreased hgb and hct
    • polychromasia, NRBC
    • A&P
    • increased bilirubin
    • decrease
Pyruvate Kinase Deficiency- Lab tests and treatment
  • pyruvate kinase enzyme assay
  • possible transfusions
  • sme may benefit from splenectomy
Methemoglobin Reductase Deficiency- Etiology
  • deficiency causes increased levels of methemoglobin
  • not an effective carrier of oxygen
  • may not be a problem unless exposed to drug
Methemoglobin Reductase Deficiency- Clinical features, lab findings, treatment
  • cyanosis
  • lab findings: mild compensatory polycythemia
  • treatment: remove offending drug

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