Thalassemia differential diagnosis: Difference between revisions

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|[[Hemolytic anemia]]   
|[[Hemolytic anemia]]   
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* Medication-induced
* [[Autoimmunity]]
* [[Red blood cell]] membrane defect
* [[Red blood cell]] enzyme defect
* Shear stress from mechanical valves
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* [[Normocytic anemia|Normocytic]] (80-100 femtoliter)
* [[Normocytic anemia|Normocytic]] (80-100 femtoliter)
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* [[Inflammatory bowel disease]]
* [[Inflammatory bowel disease]]
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|[[Thalassemia]]
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* [[Genetic defect]] with alpha- or [[beta-globin]] production
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* [[Microcytic]] (<80 femtoliter)
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* Abnormal [[hemoglobin]] [[electrophoresis]] (in [[beta-thalassemia]])
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* [[Irritability]]
* [[Growth retardation]]
* [[Jaundice]]
* [[Hepatomegaly]]
* [[Splenomegaly]]
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* [[Blood transfusion|Transfusion]] support
* [[Iron]] chelation
* [[Gene therapy]] if available
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* [[Extramedullary hematopoiesis]]
* [[Extramedullary hematopoiesis]]
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|[[Iron deficiency anemia]]
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* Loss of [[iron]] from [[gastrointestinal]] blood loss or [[menstrual]] [[blood loss]]
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* [[Microcytic]] (<80 femtoliter)
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* Low serum [[iron]]
* Elevated [[transferrin]]
* Low [[transferrin saturation]]
* Low [[ferritin]]
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* [[Pallor]]
* [[Weakness]]
* Positive [[occult blood]] testing (if [[Gastrointestinal bleeding|GI bleeding]])
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* Intravenous or oral iron supplementation
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* [[Blood loss|Chronic blood loss]]
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|[[Erythropoietin]] deficiency
|[[Erythropoietin]] deficiency

Revision as of 20:45, 16 November 2017

Thalassemia Microchapters

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Shyam Patel [2] Please help WikiDoc by adding more content here. It's easy! Click here to learn about editing.

Overview

Differential Diagnosis

Characteristic/Parameter Etiology Mean corpuscular volume Laboratory abnormalities Physical examination Treatment Other associated abnormalities
Thalassemia
Sickle cell anemia
  • Genetic defect resulting in sickled hemoglobin
  • Point mutation in beta-globin chain, converting glutamic acid to valine
  • Abnormal hemoglobin electrophoresis with elevated HbSS fraction
  • Sickled [red blood cells]] on peripheral blood smear
  • Elevated ferritin (due to frequent transfusions and iron overload)
  • Folate supplemention
  • Hydroxyurea (to increase fetal hemoglobin production
  • Oxygen supplemention
  • Transfusion support
  • Iron chelation
  • Gene therapy if available
  • Crizanlizumab (P-selectin inhibitor)
  • Patient education and genetic counseling
Iron deficiency anemia
  • Intravenous or oral iron supplementation
  • Blood transfusions
Hemolytic anemia
Sideroblastic anemia

Or

Anemia of chronic disease
Erythropoietin deficiency
  • Epoetin alfa 50-100 units/kg 3 times weekly
  • Darbepoietin 0.45 mcg/kg weekly or 0.75 mcg/kg every 2 weeks[1]
Vitamin B12 or folate deficiency


References

  1. Platzbecker U, Symeonidis A, Oliva EN, Goede JS, Delforge M, Mayer J; et al. (2017). "A phase 3 randomized placebo-controlled trial of darbepoetin alfa in patients with anemia and lower-risk myelodysplastic syndromes". Leukemia. 31 (9): 1944–1950. doi:10.1038/leu.2017.192. PMC 5596208. PMID 28626220.

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