Anemia Definition
A reduction in the number of RBCs, the amount of hgb, or the hematocrit
Alternate term for WBCs?
Leukocytes
What does MCV measure?
The average RBC size
What does MCH measure?
The amount of Hgb per RBC
How long do RBCs live for in the body?
120 days
Where does O2 attach to the RBC?
To the heme binding sites on hemoglobin
These labs help define anemias by cell size and amount of Hgb
MCV and MCH
What does MCHC measure?
Concentration of hemoglobin
What does hematocrit measure?
Percentage of packed RBCs per deciliter of blood
What determines whether anemia is micro, macro or normocytic?
MCV
What is a reticulocyte?
An immature RBC without a nucleus
What could a high reticulocyte count with anemia indicate?
Potentially blood loss, hemolysis, kidney disease (with increased erythropoetin), or sickle cell.
What could a low reticulocyte count with pancytopenia indicate?
Aplastic anemia, bone marrow failure, cirrhosis of the liver, anemia d/t low iron/B12/folate, or CKD
What would a retic count of zero indicate?
Pure red cell aplasia
Normal reticulocyte lab values
0.5%-1.5%
Microcytic anemia is usually caused by
- ex: low iron, lead poisoning, thalassemia, or inflammation, anemia d/t chronic disease
Normocytic anemia is usually caused by
- could also be sepsis, chronic disease, kidney failure, or prosthetic heart valves
Macrocytic anemia is usually caused by
What is hemolytic anemia?
Anemia where RBCs are being destroyed. Often inherited.
General symptoms of all anemias
Yellowing of eyes, skin pale/cold/yellow, SOB, weakness, change in stool color, fatigue, dizziness/OH, low blood pressure, palpitations, tachycardia, spleen enlargement, decreased O2 sats, headache
Symptoms of severe anemia
Chest pain, angina, heart attack, murmers and gallops, fainting
Classification of Folic acid deficiency anemia
Macrocytic & lacking a substance
Causes of folic acid deficiency anemia
Symptoms of folic acid deficiency