symptoms of anemia
yellowing eyes, pale/cold/yellowing skin, SOB, muscular weakness, change in stool color, fatigue, dizziness, syncope, low BP, palpitations, rapid HR, CP, angina, MI, enlarged spleen
mature RBC lifespan
120 days
time for erythrocyte development
5.5 days
when does loss of nucleus occur in erythrocyte development
between orthochronic normoblast and reticulocyte
pure red cell aplasia (erythroblastopenia)
reduced proliferation or differentiation of stem cells. occurs w autoimmune disease, thymoma, viral infections, herpes, parvovirus B19, hepatitis, lymphoproliferative, congenital
aplastic anemia
forms of decreased RBC production
more common than aplasia or aplastic anemia.
what is the best indicator of iron deficiency anemia
ferritin (normal 100 (+/- 60), low
cause of iron deficiency anemia
almost always due to insufficient dietary intake
-infants, toddlers, preg woman, anyone w blood loss
US: 12% childbearing age women (higher in AA, mexican)
-most common cause is GI bleed in US; parasite worldwide
why is iron from meat more readily absorbed
attached to heme, more readily absorbed via heme carrier pro 1. non bound must be converted to ferrous iron before it can be taken up through divalent metal transporter 1.
how is iron stored
bound to apoferritin
ferroportin
transports iron from intestinal cell into blood stream
transferrin
binds ferric ion, transports to BM precursor to transferrin receptor. ferrous converted to hbg. tranferrin receptor and transferrin are recycled. can also deliver iron to hepatocytes to become stored as ferritin.
hepcidin
binds to and inhibits ferroportin on all cell types. regulatory hormone that fluctuates with iron status
features of hemolytic anemias
hemolytic anemias: intrinsic abnormalities
hemolytic anemias: extrinsic abnormalities
anti-body related
small cell anemia causes
large cell anemia causes
- drug SE
normal cell size anemia, but bad development
-chronic disease, aplastic anemia, enzyme disorders, cell shape, leukemia
normal cell size anemia, but bad survival
- sickle cells
ferrous salts
SE
-Tips
-treat mild to mod iron deficiency
SE: dyspepsia, constipation, dark feces
-vitamin C helps absorption
-ferrous sulfate is least expsnsive
-ferrous salts are better than ferric salts
-SR formulationnot recommended, as iron may pass duodenum and jejunum
-pH dependent: no antacids, h2 blockers, PPI
-empty stomach: best effect, worst tolerance
-dose by salt weight not iron content
ferrous gluconate, sulfate, fumarate
iron RDA
men/post menopause: 8 mg/d women: 18 mg/d
what reduces iorn absorption
fiber, dairy, phosphastes, tea