Anemia
Background
- Affects 1/3 of the world's population
- Most common causes are uterine and GI bleeding
- Pathophysiology
- 4 mechanisms:
- 1. Loss of RBCs by hemorrhage (e.g. GI bleed)
- 2. Increased destruction (SCD, hemolytic anemia)
- 3. Impaired production (iron/folate/B12 deficiency, aplastic/myelodysplastic anemia)
- 4. Dilutional (rapid IVF infusion)
- 4 mechanisms:
Clinical Features
- Most pts begin to be symptomatic at ~7gm/dL
- Weakness, fatigue, lethargy, DOE, palpitations
- Skin, nail bed, mucosal pallor
- Widened pulse pressure
- Jaundice, hepatosplenomegaly (hemolysis)
- Peripheral neuropathy (B12 deficiency)
Diagnosis
- Microcytic Anemia
- RDW high
- Ferritin low: Iron deficiency anemia
- Ferritin normal: Anemia chronic disease or sideroblastic anemia (e.g. lead poisoning)
- RDW normal
- RBC count low: Anemia chronic disease, hypothyroidism, Vitamin C deficiency
- RBC count nl or high: Thalassemia
- RDW high
- Normocytic Anemia
- Retic count nl
- RDW normal: Anemia chronic disease, anemia of renal insufficiency
- RDW high: Iron, Vit B12, or folate deficiency
- Retic count high
- Coombs Positive: Autoimmune cause
- Coombs negative: G6PD, SCD, spherocytosis, microangiopathic hemolysis
- Retic count nl
- Macrocytic Anemia
- RDW high: Vit B12 or folate deficiency
- RDW nl: ETOH abuse, liver disease, hypothyroidism, drug induced, myelodysplasia
Treatment
Hb <6 --> almost always transfuse
Hb >10 --> almost never transfuse
DDX
- Hemorrhage
- Destruction (hemolytic)
- Hereditary
- Acquired
- Impaired Production
- Hypochromic (microcytic)
- Fe deff, chronic disease, thalassemias, sideroblastic
- Aplastic/myelodysplastic (normocytic)
- marrow failure, chemicals (ETOH), radiation, infection (HIV, parvo), RF
- Megaloblastic (macrocytic)
- vit B12/folate def, drugs (chemo), HIV
- Hypochromic (microcytic)
Source
1/26/06 DONALDSON (adapted from Tintinalli's)
