Friday, December 1, 2000
10:30am – 12:30pm
A 35 year old woman is seen for easy fatigue for many months. She is now 24 weeks pregnant with her 3rd child in 3 years. She does not see any obstetrician and does not take any vitamins. Lately, she has developed a taste for eating ice. She has no other complaint. Family and past history are negative. She does not smoke or drink. Physical examination is positive for pale conjunctiva, mild spooning of nails, and a II/VI systolic murmur at left lower sternal border. Stools are negative for occult blood.
Labs: Complete blood count (CBC) - Hg 7.1 gm/dl, Hct 23%, WBC 5,400/mm3 (differential is normal), platelets 450,000/mm3; Mean Corpuscular volume (MCV) is 74 fl (normal 85-95 fl); Red cell Distribution Width (RDW) is 17.1% (normal 13-15).
QUESTIONS
1. Explain "tasting for eating ice". Spooning of nails. Answer
2. How reliable is physical examination in diagnosing anemia? Answer
3. What is the normal RBC Answer
Maturation stages
Morphological characteristics
Hemoglobin synthesis
Control of erythropoiesis
4. What is the main function of RBC's? Answer
5. First step is to make a distinction between hypo- and hyperproliferative anemia. How will you decide that? What is your understanding of those terms? Answer
6. How will you recognize reticulocytes in the peripheral smear? Answer
7. How do you count and express reticulocyte count? Answer
8. How do MCV and RDW help you in the diagnostic work-up of anemia? Do the other indices-Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin (MCH) and Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin Concentration (MCHC)-add anything? Answer
Let us return to our case. She has MCV of 74 fl (normal 85-95 fl). Let us evaluate her peripheral smear.
She has microcytic hypochromic anemia.
9. What is the differential for microcytic hypochromic anemia. Answer
10. Does microcytic anemia represents a maturation defect or abnormal hemoglobin synthesis? Answer
11. How would you proceed to differentiate between the different possibilities for microcytic anemia? Answer
12. What further tests would you like to do in this patient to confirm iron deficiency? Answer
13. Calculate her iron saturation? How useful is iron saturation in the diagnosis of anemia's? Answer
14. What is ferritin? How do you interpret low and high ferritin values? Answer
15. If this patient was African-American, would you want to obtain a hemoglobin electrophoresis? Answer
16. Should one do a bone marrow test in this patient? If one did , what would you expect to see? Answer
17. Could she have 'anemia of chronic disorder'? What are the known mechanisms of anemia of chronic disorder? Answer
18. Your intern wants you to order a B12 and folate level also, for sake of completeness. Is that justifiable? Answer
Now that we have confirmed that this patient has iron deficiency anemia, let us understand few basics.
19. What tissues /cells require Iron for normal development? Answer
20. What are the normal resource for iron in diet? Answer
21. What is the daily requirement of iron for a normal adult? Is it different for females or pregnant women? Answer
22. This patient's old records indicate that she did not have a murmur in the past. Should one obtain an echocardiogram to rule out valvular heart disease? Answer
23. What are the common causes of iron deficiency anemia? Children, Young adult, Older adult. Males, Females. Answer
24. What are the clinical sequelae to iron deficiency anemia? Answer
25. What is your therapeutic strategy for treatment of iron deficiency anemia? Answer
26. What treatment would you prescribe for this patient? How soon should you expect a response? Answer
27. How long will you treat her with iron supplement and why? Answer
28. In which part of GI tract is iron absorbed? What else is necessary for iron absorption? Answer
29. Are there any problems associated with iron therapy? Answer
30. Is there a role for Blood transfusion? Answer