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==Differentiating Autoimmune hemolytic anemia from other Diseases==
==Differentiating Autoimmune hemolytic anemia from other Diseases==
Diagnosis is made by first ruling out other causes of hemolytic anemia, such as [[glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency|G6PD]], [[thalassemia]], [[sickle-cell disease]], etc.
Diagnosis is made by first ruling out other causes of hemolytic anemia, such as [[glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency|G6PD]], [[thalassemia]], [[sickle-cell disease]], etc.
{| class="wikitable"
!Characterisitc/Parameter
!Etiology
!Mean corpuscular volume
!Laboratory abnormalities
!Physical examination
!Treatment
!Other associated abnormalities
|-
|Hemolytic anemia
|
* [[Drug-induced]]
* [[Immune-mediated disease|Immune-mediated]]
* Non-immune-mediated
* [[Infections]]
* [[Rheumatologic disease]]
|
* [[Normocytic anemia|Normocytic]] (80-100 femtoliter)
|
* Indirect [[hyperbilirubinemia]]
* [[Reticulocytosis]]
* Low [[haptoglobin]]
* Elevated [[LDH]]
|
* [[Pallor]]
* [[Jaundice]]
|
* Removal of offending agent
* [[Steroids]]
* Alternative [[immunosuppression]]
|
* [[HELLP syndrome]]
* [[TTP]]
* [[Chronic lymphocytic leukemia|CLL]]
|-
|[[Sideroblastic anemia]]
|
* [[Alcoholism]]
* [[Lead poisoning]]
* [[Vitamin B6 deficiency]]
* [[Isoniazid]]
* [[Chloramphenicol]]
|
* [[Microcytic anemia|Microcytic]] (<80 femtoliter)
Or
* [[Normocytic anemia|Normocytic]] (80-100 femtoliter)
|
* Ringed sideroblasts in [[bone marrow]]
* Low [[vitamin B6]] level
* High [[lead]] level
|
* [[Pallor]]
* [[Muscle weakness|Weakness]]
|
* Removal of offending [[medication]]
* High-dose [[vitamin B6]] (up to 200mg daily)
* Avoidance of [[splenectomy]]
* Symptomatic [[Blood transfusion|transfusion]] support with [[iron]] [[chelation]] as needed
|
* [[Myelodysplastic syndrome]]
* [[Myeloproliferative neoplasm]]
* [[Iron overload]]
|-
|[[Thalassemia]]
|
* [[Genetic defect]] with alpha- or [[beta-globin]] production
|
* [[Microcytic]] (<80 femtoliter)
|
* Abnormal [[hemoglobin]] [[electrophoresis]] (in [[beta-thalassemia]])
|
* [[Irritability]]
* [[Growth retardation]]
* [[Jaundice]]
* [[Hepatomegaly]]
* [[Splenomegaly]]
|
* [[Blood transfusion|Transfusion]] support
* [[Iron]] chelation
* [[Gene therapy]] if available
|
* [[Extramedullary hematopoiesis]]
|-
|[[Iron deficiency anemia]]
|
* Loss of [[iron]] from [[gastrointestinal]] blood loss or [[menstrual]] [[blood loss]]
|
* [[Microcytic]] (<80 femtoliter)
|
* Low serum [[iron]]
* Elevated [[transferrin]]
* Low [[transferrin saturation]]
* Low [[ferritin]]
|
* [[Pallor]]
* [[Weakness]]
* Positive [[occult blood]] testing (if [[Gastrointestinal bleeding|GI bleeding]])
|
* Intravenous or oral iron supplementation
|
* [[Blood loss|Chronic blood loss]]
|-
|[[Pernicious anemia]]
|
* Vitamin B12 deficiency
|
* [[Macrocytic anemia|Macrocytic]] (>100 femtoliter)
|
* Low vitamin B12 or folate level
* [[Megaloblastic anemia]] with  hypersegmented [[neutrophils]]
|
* [[Numbness]]
* [[Weakness]]
* [[Tingling]]
* [[Paresthesias]]
|
* [[Vitamin B12]] 1000mcg daily
|
* [[Autoimmune disorders]]
|}


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 23:08, 1 April 2018

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Overview

Differentiating Autoimmune hemolytic anemia from other Diseases

Diagnosis is made by first ruling out other causes of hemolytic anemia, such as G6PD, thalassemia, sickle-cell disease, etc.


Characterisitc/Parameter Etiology Mean corpuscular volume Laboratory abnormalities Physical examination Treatment Other associated abnormalities
Hemolytic anemia
Sideroblastic anemia

Or

Thalassemia
Iron deficiency anemia
  • Intravenous or oral iron supplementation
Pernicious anemia
  • Vitamin B12 deficiency


References

Template:Hematology


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