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Hematology
Please note that this was put together by a UNC MS2
for other UNC MS2s. If you find any mistakes or have
any feedback, let us know especially if this was
remotely helpful in any way!
Characteristics of
Normal Adult Bone Marrow
Peripheral Blood
Morphology
1.
2.
Erythrocytes
Granulocytes
1.
2.
3.
3.
4.
5.
Neutrophils
Eosinophils
Basophils
Platelets
Monocytes
Lymphocytes (B & T cells)
Orthochromatophilic
erythroblast
Reticulocyte
Polychromatophilic
erythroblast
Mature RBC
Metamyelocyte
Promyelocyte
Band
Myelocyte*
Neutrophil
Eosinophil
Monocyte
Neutrophil
1.
2.
3.
4.
inadequate intake
Malabsorption
diversion of iron during pregnancy
blood loss
2)
3)
Causes of Macrocytic
Anemia
B12 deficiency
Folate deficiency
DNA synthesis
B12 = co-factor
Folate = transfer single carbon groups
Folate
Vitamin B12
In animal products
Unaffected by cooking
Need 1-2 micrograms daily
Folate Deficiency
3 major causes
Dietary
Malabsorption
Increased usage
3 ways to diagnose
folate deficiency
Morphology
Serum folate
Red cell folate
Whats This?
Megaloblastic Anemia
Possible Causes?
B12 or folate deficiency
B12 Deficiency
3 major causes
Pernicious Anemia
Pancreatic Insufficiency
Malabsorption
3 ways to diagnose
B12 deficiency
Morphology
Serum B12
Neurologic findings
Demyelination of spinal cord,
cerebral cortex
B12
Folate
Anisocytosis refers
to red cells which
vary widely in size.
The RDW
mathematically
measures the
range of red cell
sizes.
Microcytosis refers to
red cells that are small.
You can use the
lymphocyte nucleus as
a visual reference, or
you can use the MCV
Associated with
Iron deficiency
Thalassemias
Sideroblastic anemia
Macrocytosis refers to
large red cells.
Associated with
Hypochromasia
refers to red cells
that have too little
hemoglobin.
The area of central
pallor is more than
1/3 the total red cell
diameter.
This is measured by
the MCH (mean
cellular hemoglobin)
Iron deficiency
Poikilocytosis
refers to red cells
that vary widely in
shape.
Remember that
anisocytosis refers
to red cells that
vary widely in size.
Liver disease
Thalassemias
Hemoglobin C
After splenectomy
Spherocytes have a
loss of central pallor.
Can be seen in
Hereditary
spherocytosis
Autoimmune
hemolysis
If due to autoimmune
hemolysis, the cells
are smaller (i.e.
microspherocytes)
Schistocytes are
red cell fragments
with sharp edges.
They are a
hallmark of
Microangiopathic
Hemolytic Anemia
(MAHA)
Echinocytes, or burr
cells, have small,
regular projections.
Seen in renal disease
Acanthocytes, or spur
cells, have larger,
irregular projections,
and are seen in liver
disease.
Teardrop cells
Seen in
myelophthisic
processes, or
diseases of marrow
infiltration.
Deformed as it tries
to squeeze out of
the bone marrow
And what
have we
here?
What
causes
them?
What do you
see here?
Causes?
What do you
see here?
Post-splenectomy blood
findings
Extravascular Hemolysis
Intravascular Hemolysis
In the blood:
Elevated reticulocyte count
May be associated with high MCV
Circulating NRBCs may be present
In the bone marrow:
erythroid hyperplasia
reduced M/E (myeloid/erythroid) ratio
In the bone:
Deforming changes in the skull and long bones
(frontal bossing)
Elevated LDH
Elevated unconjugated bilirubin jaundice, scleral icterus
Lower serum haptoglobin
Hemoglobinemia
Hemoglobinuria
Hemosiderinuria
Schistocytes
Spherocytes
Bite/blister cells
Congenital
Acquired
Immune-mediated
Non-immune-mediated
Frequency?
Diagnosing?
Autosomal dominant
Pathophysiology?
Transmission?
Hereditary spherocytosis
Treatment?
Supplemental folate
Splenectomy (but carefully consider timing in children)
Functions of GP6D?
NADPH
Reduced glutathione
Heinz bodies
Causes the formation of bite/blister cells
G6PD Deficiency
Agents to avoid
For SKAND
Fava beans
Sulfa drugs
Vitamin K
Anti-malarials
Naphtha
compounds
(mothballs)
Dapsone
Blister cell
Coombs Test
Warm-Antibody Hemolytic
Anemias
Clinical Features
Warm-Antibody Hemolytic
Anemias Treatment
Immunosuppressive Treatment
Folate repletion
Transfusion determining factors:
Innocent bystander
Hapten
True autoimmune
You dont need the drug in the body any more to get
the hemolysis
Alpha-methyldopa, L-DOPA, Procainamide
Non-Immune Hemolytic
Anemia
Classification
Infections
Drugs, Chemicals, and Venoms
Severe Burns
Arsenic
Copper
Insect and spider bites
Infections Causing
Hemolysis
Malaroa
Babesia microti
Clostridium welchii
Bartonella bacilliformis
2 alpha chains
2 non-alpha chains
Normal Human
Hemoglobins
2 2
2 2
2 2
2 2
Heme Synthesis
Globin
Globin (G and A ) *
Structure of the
Hemoglobin Molecule
Possible Consequences of a
Hemoglobinopathy
No detectable effect
Unstable
Hemoglobinopathies
Hemoglobinopathy Altering
Oxygen Affinity
Hemoglobin M
Diseases
However, there are a number of other SCD genotypes compound heterozygous states
Therapeutic Approaches
Chemical inhibition of Hb S
polymerization
Increase in intracellular hydration
What is this an
example of?
Typical
Diseases?
Megaloblastic
Anemia
What Disease?
Target Cell
Sickled Cell
(1) Adhesion
exposure to
collagen;
binding to von
Willebrand
factor via GPIb
receptor
(4) Aggregation and
Surface Coagulation
(3) Granule
Content
Release
ADP released,
integrin
activation,
fibrinogen binding
Cofactors:
Non-protein cofactors:
Fibrinogen:
Prothrombin
Time (PT)
XII
Extrinsic
Pathway
XI
IX
VII
VIII
X
Common
Pathway
V
Prothrombin (II)
Fibrinogen
PT
what
does it do?
Activated Partial
XII
Thromboplastin
Time (APTT)
XI
IX
Intrisic
Pathway
VII
VIII
X
Common
Pathway
V
Prothrombin (II)
Fibrinogen
Thrombin Clot
Time (TCT)
XII
XI
IX
VII
VIII
X
V
Prothrombin (II)
Fibrinogen
Measures conversion of
fibrinogen to
polymerized fibrin
Sensitive to
quantitative and
qualitative fibrinogen
deficiencies.
Hemophilia A
Factor VIII
(VIII)
Hemophilia B
Factor X
IXa
(IX)
VIIIa
Factor Xa
Fibrinogen
Prothrombin
Va
Xa
Thrombin
Fibrin
Thrombus
von Willebrand
Factor VIIIFactor (vWF)
Primary Hemostasis
Secondary Hemostasis
Virchows Triad
Virchow (1845) thought that
thrombosis was the result of
abnormalities in:
A) the vessel wall;
B) blood flow, and
C) the properties of blood.
Thrombosis: 2 Types
Arterial: Injury to the
endothelium; platelets adhere and
a dense platelet aggregate is
formed, and coagulation system
activated.
White thrombus
Venous: Related to decrease blood flow (stasis);
venous thrombosis is dominated by the
coagulation system, the production of fibrin-rich
thrombi.
Red thrombus
Thrombosis
Why heparin therapy?
Inhibits further thrombus formation almost immediately.
Why warfarin therapy?
Depletes vitamin K-dependent factors to impair procoagulant
function.
Why tissue plasminogen activator therapy?
Degrades thrombus to re-establish blood flow.
Family history?
Necessary to determine if familial or acquired clinical scenario.
Common hereditary cause of venous thrombosis?
factor V Leiden: a plasma protein resistant to inactivation by
the protein C system
Oral anticoagulants
produce their effect by interfering with the cyclic interconversion of vitamin K and its 2,3 epoxide (vitamin K
epoxide).
Fibrinolytic enzymes-
Induction of a fibrinolytic
state by the infusion of plasminogen activators is used in
massive pulmonary embolism and to restore the patency of
acutely occluded arteries.
Arterial Thrombosis
Adhesion
Aggregation
Providing a phospholipid
Secretion
scaffold
for coagulation
Platelets release granular
contents and potentiate
clotting
reactions,
like
generation
Spits out pro-clotting
materials:
ADP, Epi, factor V,
vWF, fibrinogen
of Xa and thrombin!
Thrombocytopenia
three broad categories of
causes
Underproduction
Peripheral Destruction
Splenic sequestration
WRONG!!!
Its Pseudothrombocytopenia!
Or in Dr. Mas words, you
could say damn, theres more
than one platelet on this field
Whats the
ACK, and this?
Petechia
e
difference?
Thrombocytopenia
Underproduction Causes
DIC- Diagnosis
Low platelets
Low/falling fibrinogen
Elevated fibrin degradation products
(FDPs/FSPs) or D-Dimers
transfusion of platelets
clotting factors, fibrinogen
+/- low dose heparin to halt thrombin generation.
TTP - etiology
ticlopidine,
quinine,
cyclosporine,
FK-506,
mitomycin C
TTP - Treatment
ITP - Therapy
TTP
DIC
Must have Usually
Must have Maybe
PT/FDP/
Fibrinogen
Normal
Low
Transfuse
platelets?
NEVER
Maybe
Treatment
Plasma
Tx underexchange lying
cause
ITP
Must have
Never
n/A
Only if pt is
bleeding
Steroids,
IVIG,
AntiD
Congenital -
Acquired
uremia
Drugs - ASA, NSAIDs, antibiotics, ReoPro,
Herbs - ginkgo, garlic, Vitamin E
Myeloproliferative diseases
Diagnosis?
Normal APTT/PT/TCT, prolonged bleed time
Anti-Platelet Drugs
Aspirin
Thienopyridine Derivatives
GPIIb/IIIa inhibitors
Hgb >12.5
BP, pulse: healthy
Uniform Donor screening questionnaire
Infectious Disease Screening of donor
Hepatitis B
Hepatitis C
HIV I/II
HTLV I/II
Syphilis
pRBC Storage
RBCs suspended in
anticoagulant (citrate based) and,
Additive Solution - AS
Provides nutrients to support RBC
metabolism
42 days = Shelf life
Volume= 250 to 300 mL
65% RBCs, 35% plasma and AS
contains WBCs and some platelets
may be frozen w/ glycerol (cryoprotectant) for
10 yrs
pRBC Transfusion
Dextrose
Medications
Hypertonic solutions
Cryoprecipitate: Contents,
How to Get it, Tx, Dosing?
O
A
B
AB
45%
41%
10%
4%
What is ABO?
Codominant inheritence
Encode for a glycosyl transferase enzyme
Adds the specific terminal sugar to the
glycolipid backbone
Convey immunogenicity
O = fucose
A = N-acetyl galactosamine
B = galactose
ABO Discrepancy
Cold agglutinin
Weak or absent antibodies in elderly or infants
Interfering substance: protein, dextran
Weak subgroup of A or B
RECIPENT
BLOOD
TYPE
O
A
B
AB
RED CELLS
PLASMA
AB, A, B, O
AB
Whose
Whose
RBCs
Plasma
O
O,
A, B, AB
A, they
O
A, AB
Can
Can
they
B, O
B, AB
Take?
Take?
ABO Antibodies
Transfusion practice
Transfusion reactions
Hemolytic disease of newborn
D+ 85% prevalence
D- 15%
= Rh+
= Rh-
Highly immunogenic
Clinically significant with RBC transfusion & platelet transfusion
Transfusion or pregnancy
ABO
Bacteria, pollen
Rh
IgG
Test at body temp
Causes extravascular
hemolysis
Sensitization required
Pregnancy, transfusion
K
Fy a , Fy b
Jk a, Jk b
Kell
Duffy
Kidd
Antibody Screen
Types of Crossmatch
Full Crossmatch
Electronic Crossmatch
Special Circumstances
Emergency Release
Conditional Release
Component Modifications
Leukocyte reduction
Filtration with specialized leukocyte removing filters 3 log leukocyte
reduction
Washing
Removal of plasma by washing RBC or platelets with saline
BMT
Hematopoietic malignancies undergoing chemotherapy
Premature infants
Severe combined immunodeficiency
Blood products from relatives must also be irradiated due to HLA antigens
Allergic
Hemolytic
Febrile, non-hemolytic
Anaphylactic
Transfusion related acute lung injury (TRALI)
Hemolytic
GVHD
Platelet refractoriness
Post transfusion Purpura (development of anti-platelet antibodies)
Iron Overload
Infectious Disease transmission
Suspected Transfusion
Reaction
Hemolytic reaction symptoms are not specific
and include:
Fever
Chills
Hypotension
Oozing from IV site
Back pain
Hemoglobinuia red urine
White Cells
What are the cell types?
Granulocytes
Neutrophils
Band forms
Eosinophils
Basophils
Lymphocytes
Monocyte/Macrophages
ID the cell!
Band Cell
Eosinophil
Basophil
Monocyte
Lymphocyte
Neutrophil
Neutrophils!
chemotaxis,
phagocytosis,
killing of phagocytosed bacteria
Eosinophil
Granulocytes with large, refractile,
orange-pink granules.
Nucleus is typically bilobed.
Functions include all PMN functions,
Chemotaxis
Phagocytosis
Killing of phagocytosed bacteria
mediation of immediate-type
hypersensitivity
modulation of inflammatory
responses by releasing heparin and
proteases
Precursor of tissue mast cells
Lymphocyte
Lymphocytes have an oval nucleus,
with a thin rim of blue cytoplasm.
There may be a few very fine
purplish-red granules.
The nuclear border is smooth.
Functions in immune regulation
and production of hematopoietic
growth factors.
Functions in
chemotaxis,
phagocytosis,
killing of some microbes,
antigen presentation,
release of IL-1 and TNF, which
stimulates bone marrow stromal cells
to produce growth factors, including:
GM-CSF, G-CSF, M-CSF, and IL-6.
Precursors of tissue macrophages
exercise,
pregnancy,
lactation,
neonates
Acute infections
Acute inflammation surgery, burns, infarcts,
crush injuries, acute gout, rheumatoid arthritis
Acute hemorrhage
Non hematologic malignancies
Myeloproliferative disorders, esp CML
Drugs: corticosteroids, G-CSF, lithium
Misc: seizures, electric shock, post-splenectomy,
Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency
Causes of Neutropenia
Physiologic - in African-Americans
Drugs
anti-psychotics,
anti-epileptics,
anti-thyroid, and
some antibiotics (gold, sulfa)
Chemotherapy
Infections: viral, overwhelming bacterial
sepsis, TB, fungal
Immune - lupus, rheumatoid arthritis (Felty
syndrome)
Familial
Hypothyroidism, hypopituitarism
Causes of Eosinophilia
Neoplasm,
Allergy/asthma,
Addisons disease,
Collagen vascular disease
Parasites
Causes of Lymphocytosis
Viral infections
Bacterial infections - whooping cough
(pertussis), TB, syphilis, brucellosis
Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)
Lymphomas and Waldenstroms
macroglobulinemia
Causes of Lymphocytopenia
Causes of Monocytosis
Adherence
Chemotaxis
Recognition/Phagocytosis
Degranulation
Defects in Neutrophil
Function
Acquired Defects
Congenital Defects
Secondary Erythrocytosis
Primary Erythrocytosis
Headaches
Visual changes
Tinnitus
Dizziness
Paresthesias
Decreased mental acuity
Erythrocytosis due to
appropriate increases in epo
Polycythemia vera
Essential Thrombocythemia
Myelofibrosis
Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia
Basophilia
Splenomegaly
Polycythemia vera
Most of cells in circulation are derived from a single,
neoplastic stem cell
Does not need Epo to produce more cells
Diagnosis based on low/absent levels of Epo
Natural History 4 phases:
Latent phase - asymptomatic
Proliferative phase -pts may have sxs of:
Hypermetabolism
Hyperviscosity
Thrombosis
Symptoms of Polycythemia
Vera
Those common to ALL erythrocytosis
Headache
Decreased mental acuity
Weakness
Facial plethora
Splenomegaly
Hepatomegaly
Retinal vein distension
Lab findings
BASOPHILIA
Low EPO levels
Increased Hbg/HCT, WBCs, platelets, uric acid, B12, leukocyte alkaline
phosphatase score
P vera - Treatment
Phlebotomy Draw 500 cc blood 1-2x/wk to target Hct 45%; maintain BP w/ saline
Generally, the best initial treatment for P vera rapid onset
Downsides:
Increased risk of thrombosis
No effect on progression to spent phase
May be insufficient to control disease
Myelosuppressive agents
Hydroxyurea
can be used in conjunction with phlebotomy
May increase the risk of leukemic transformation from 1-2% to 4-5%
32P kills some of the proliferating cells!
increase the risk of leukemic transformation from 1-2% to 11%
Single injection may control hemoglobin and platelet count for a year or
more.
Alkylating agents such as busulfan
Interferon alpha
Benefits
No myelosuppression
No increase in progression to AML
No increase in thrombosis risk
Drawbacks
Must be given by injection up to daily
Side effects may be intolerable in many pts: flu-like symptoms, fatigue,
fever, myalgias, malaise
Essential Thrombocythemia
Essential Thrombocythemia
Myelofibrosis
Teardrop RBCs
Nucleated RBCs
Early granulocytes/precursors
Myelodysplastic Syndromes
Macrocytic RBCs
Large platelets
Hypogranular or bilobed nuclei neutrophils
Megaloblastic erythropoeisis
Ringed sideroblasts
Abnormal nucleus of RBC precursors (dyserythropoiesis)
Small megakaryocytes with abnormally hypolobate
nuclei
Blast cells should account for <30% of marrow cells