Haematology revision

55
Haematology revision Shin Ying Lee

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Haematology revision. Shin Ying Lee. 2010. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Haematology revision

Haematology revision

Shin Ying Lee

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2010

• You are on cover for a surgical ward when you are called to Mrs McCulloch, who has just commenced a blood transfusion for a low post operative haemoglobin. Three minutes after the start of the transfusion the patient develops lumbar pains, rigors, dyspnoea and hypotension.

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2010

• You are on cover for a surgical ward when you are called to Mrs McCulloch, who has just commenced a blood transfusion for a low post operative haemoglobin. Three minutes after the start of the transfusion the patient develops lumbar pains, rigors, dyspnoea and hypotension.

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• What is the name of this complication of the transfusion. 1

Acute hemolytic transfusion reaction

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• What is the most likely procedural reason for this complication to have arisen? 1

ABO incompatibility. Failure to check identity of patient when taking sample for compatibility testing, failure to perform paper identity checks before blood is transfused.

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• List 3 treatments that the patient might then urgently require. 3

1.High flow oxygen2.IV fluids3.Diuretics

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• Name 2 further steps that would need to be taken rapidly. 1

1. Send donor blood back to blood bank with notification of event

2. Inform hospital transfusion department immediately

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• What might you detect in the urine? 1

Hemoglobin

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• List three further short term complications of blood transfusions. 3

1. Febrile non-hemolytic reaction 2. Allergic and anaphylactic reaction 3. TRALI (Transfusion related acute lung

injury)

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2007

• A 40 year old woman presents with recent tiredness and lethargy. She has pale conjunctivae and you think there may be some yellowing of the sclera.

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2007

• A 40 year old woman presents with recent tiredness and lethargy. She has pale conjunctivae and you think there may be some yellowing of the sclera.

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• Name two investigations you would perform and what are you likely to see? 2

1. Bloods – FBC, LFT. high reticulocytes count, High bilirubin levels>50

2. Peripheral blood film- spherocytes, elliptocytes

2. Urine sample – Urobilinogen in the urine

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• What two abnormalities might you expect to see on biochemistry and haematology in haemolytic anaemia? 2

Biochem- High bilirubin levels, high LDH Haemato- Low hemoglobin, increase

reticulocytes count

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• She has a splenectomy. What two things would you want to vaccinate against? 2

Pneumococcal vaccine Haemophilus influenza type B vaccine

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• What two pieces of advice would you want to give her in regards to her asplenism?2

1) Lifelong prophylactic antibiotics 2) Reimmunisation every 5 years, annual

influenza vaccine 3) Increased risk of malaria falciparum, anti-

malarial precautions

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• Name two causes of haemolytic anaemia. 2

1) Abnormal membrane (Hereditary spherocytosis, elliptocytosis)

2) Abnormal enzymes (G6PD deficiency) 3) Abnormal hemoglobin synthesis

(thalassemia, hemoglobinopathies, sickle cell disease)

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Leukaemia

• 4 types Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) Acute lymphoid leukaemia (ALL) Chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL)

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Investigations

• Blood count, White count differentials, red cells, haemoglobin, plaletets

• Peripheral blood film• Bone marrow biopsy and aspiration• Immunophenotyping and molecular methods• Cytogenetic analysis

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CML

• Anaemia, bruising, unwell• Dragging sensation at the abdomen/ abdomen

fullness (splenomegaly)• Translocation of 9: 22. Philadelphia chromosome

>80% cases • Chimeric gene (BCR/ABL) > phosphoprotein

(p190 and p210) with high tyrosine kinase activity seen.

• spectrum of myeloid lineage cells

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CML(peripheral blood film)

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• Three phrases - Chronic phase - Accelerated phase - Blast crisis

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Treatment

• Imatinib (tyrosine kinase inhibitor) Glivec/Gleevec

• Allogenic transplantation

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CLL

• Swollen glands• Constitutional signs and symptoms: Fever,

night sweats, weight loss• Mature lymphocytes• Transformed to Diffuse Large B cell lymphoma Richter’s transformation• Chemotherapy • Stem cell transplant

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CLL (peripheral blood film)

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AML

• Neoplastic proliferation of blast cells derived from myeloid elements.

• Bone marrow aspiration: auer rods, myeloid precursors

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AML

Clinical: Good prognostic factors

Bad prognostic factors

Age < 50 years > 60 years

WBC count <25,000/mm3 >25,000/mm3

FAB type M3,M4eo Mo

Auer rods present absent

Fibrosis absent absent

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ALL

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ALL

• Affects children more commonly• Bleeding gums, recurrent infections, tiredness• Hepato-splenomegaly• Bone marrow aspiration: lymphoblast with

PAS positive

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Treatment

Chemotherapy• Remission induction : Vincristine,

prednisolone, L-asparaginase, daunorubicin• Consolidation• CNS prophylaxis: Intrathecal methotrexate+/-

CNS irradiation• MaintenanceBone marrow transplant

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Prognostic factors

Clinical: Good prognostic factors Bad prognostic factors

age 4 to 10 years > 10 years, or <2 years

WBC count <50,000 mm3 >50,000 mm3

Immunophenotype B-precursor ALL Mature B or T cell

sex girls boysChromosomal number hyperdiploidy hypodiploidy

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Lymphoma• Two types: Hodgkin’s and Non Hodgkins• Malignancy of the lymph nodes• Diagnosis confirmation – lymph node biopsy• Bloods plus LDH, uric acid • CXR: bihilar lymphadenopathy• Staging: CT scan chest, abdo-pelvis+BMA• B symptoms: fever, weight loss, night sweats,

lethargy

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Types

• Nodular sclerosis (good prognosis)• Mixed cellularity • Lymphocyte rich• Lymphocyte depleted (poor)

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Reed Sternberg Cell

• Nucleus is enclosed with an abundant amphophilic cytoplasm, and contains large, inclusion-like, owl eyed nucleoli, surrounded by a clear halo.

• Hodgkin’s Lymphoma

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Ann Arbor staging

• Stage I - a single lymph node area or single extranodal site

• Stage II - 2 or more lymph node areas on the same side of the diaphragm

• Stage III - denotes lymph node areas on both sides of the diaphragm

• Stage IV - disseminated or multiple involvement of the extranodal organs

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Non Hodgkin’s Treatment• Depending on subtype• Low grade if symptomless none, localized

radiotherapy, diffuse (Chlorambucil)• High grade (DLBCL) CHOP• Cychophosphamide• Hydroxydaunorubicin• Oncovin (vincristine)• Prednisolone• +/- Rituximab

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Myeloma

• Malignant clonal proliferation of B-lymphocyte derived plasma cells

• Osteolytic bone lesions – unexplained backache, pathological fractures

• Anaemic, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia• Renal impairment

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Investigations

• Bloods: Blood count, Hypercalcemia- increase osteoclastic activity

• Serum and urine electrophoresis• Urine sample- Bence Jones protein – K,

Lambda light chains• B2 microglobulin prognostic test• Skeletal survey- Lytic ‘punched out’ lesion

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Diagnostic criteria

• Monoclonal protein band in serum or urine electrophoresis

• Increased plasma cells found on BMB• Evidence of end organ damage from myeloma - Hypercalcemia - Renal insufficiency - Anaemia - Bone lesions

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Treatment

• Supportive• Chemotherapy

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Complications of myeloma

• Hypercalcaemia• Spinal cord compression• Hyperviscosity• Acute renal failure

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4 causes of massive splenomegaly

• CML• Malaria• Myelofibrosis• Thalassemia

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EMQ questions

• A 27-year-old man presents with a two-month history of pruritis, fatigue and weight loss. On questioning he admits that whenever he drinks alcohol, he experiences bone pain. On examination he has a rubbery non-tender submandibular lymph node. He has never had infectious mononucleosis.

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• A 27-year-old man presents with a two-month history of pruritis, fatigue and weight loss. On questioning he admits that whenever he drinks alcohol, he experiences bone pain. On examination he has a rubbery non-tender submandibular lymph node. He has never had infectious mononucleosis.

Hodgkin’s lymphoma

EMQ questions

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EMQ questions

• A 68-year-old woman presents with a history of bruising, bone pain and lymphadenopathy. Unbeknownst to the consultant, this patient has a (t9,22) mutation known as the Philadelphia Chromosome. On examination the consultant finds a massively enlarged spleen.

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• A 68-year-old woman presents with a history of bruising, bone pain and lymphadenopathy. Unbeknownst to the consultant, this patient has a (t9,22) mutation known as the Philadelphia Chromosome. On examination the consultant finds a massively enlarged spleen.

Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia

EMQ questions

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EMQ questions

• A 12-year-old girl of Nigerian descent and with a known blood disorder presents to A&E with a two-day history of dyspnoea, cough and fever. You order several investigations and note that she has a Hb of 6g/dl (reference range 11.5 – 1.35 g/dl) and a chest X-ray showing pulmonary infiltrates.

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• A 12-year-old girl of Nigerian descent and with a known blood disorder presents to A&E with a two-day history of dyspnoea, cough and fever. You order several investigations and note that she has a Hb of 6g/dl (reference range 11.5 – 1.35 g/dl) and a chest X-ray showing pulmonary infiltrates.

Sickle cell anaemia

EMQ questions

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EMQ questions

• A 65-year-old lady presents to her GP with a 3-month history of vertigo, tinnitus and visual disturbance. She admits to feeling “a bit down” and the GP decides to carry out some routine bloods. A week later she returns and you note that her blood results show a raised high haemoglobin and a raised pack cell volume and red blood cell count.

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• A 65-year-old lady presents to her GP with a 3-month history of vertigo, tinnitus and visual disturbance. She admits to feeling “a bit down” and the GP decides to carry out some routine bloods. A week later she returns and you note that her blood results show a raised high haemoglobin and a raised pack cell volume and red blood cell count.

Polycythaemia vera

EMQ questions

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EMQ questions

• A 37 year old lady with known hypothyroidism presents to you with fatigue, dyspnoea and palpitations. You note that she is pale and tachycardic. Routine bloods show a macrocytic anaemia. You suspect that this is caused by her hypothyroidism. You find a positive Schilling’s test.

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• A 37 year old lady with known hypothyroidism presents to you with fatigue, dyspnoea and palpitations. You note that she is pale and tachycardic. Routine bloods show a macrocytic anaemia. You suspect that this is caused by her hypothyroidism. You find a positive Schilling’s test.

Pernicious anaemia

EMQ questions

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Thank you