CRRM1.5: anaemias 101/11/07
Learning Outcomes
Describe the way iron is handled in the body; including daily requirements
- In a typical diet, 10-30mg of iron is consumed daily; only around 10% is actually absorbed
- The amount of iron in the whole body averages at around 2-3g, most of which is part of haemoglobin
- Dietary iron, found primarily in meat and vegetables, is absorbed in the duodenum of the small intestine, typically as ferrous iron (Fe2+)
- Some iron is stored as ferritin in the liver; most is transported to bone marrow sites under the action of iron transferin (ferric iron only; regulated by erythropoietin) to contribute to haemopoiesis
- When RBCs break down to release bilirubin, this is broken down in the liver to make bile as well as the kidney, from which it is excreted in urine
- Iron passes through duodenal cells through one of two pathways:
- Ferrous iron is absorbed directly and is able to pass straight out of the cell and into the plasma via the baso-lateral transporter, after which it is typically oxidised to ferric iron for binding to transferin
- Ferric iron is bound to mobilferrin which transports it across the cell after which it binds to transferin for transport into the plasma; this pathway has a highaffinity but lowcapacity
- Some ferric iron is reduced in the gut and ferritin / mobilferrin are able to exchange between iron oxidation states within gut cells
- Iron is generally retained in the body since it is only lost by blood loss and via the intestine / bladder
- The total iron binding capacity (TIBC) is a measure of the number of ‘free’ transferin molecules in the plasma
- Iron absorption favours acidic conditions; caffeine and phytic acid (found in beans and pulses) reduce absorption
Explain the roles of blood loss, dietary, growth causing anaemia
- Anaemia is defined as a lower than expected amount of haemoglobin in the blood (normal amounts vary between age groups, sex etc.)
- Common symptoms include excessive tiredness, breathlessness on exertion, dizziness, pallor, poor resistance to infection and a weak, rapid pulse
- Complications of anaemia include glossitis (inflammation of the tongue), angular stomatitis (cracking at the corners of the mouth), koilonychia (‘spoon-shaped’ nails) and pica (craving for non-food items)
- Anaemias are classified according to blood indices:
- Low MCV (microcytic RBCs[TG1]) implies iron deficiency anaemia(reduced Hb production – also reduced serum iron, increased TIBC) or possibly thalassaemia (normal iron / ferritin levels)
- High MCV (macrocytic RBCs) can imply either:
- Vitamin B12or folate deficiency if there are abnormal precursors to RBCs found in bone marrow (megaloblastic)
- A non-specific liver problem if RBC production is normal, e.g. from alcohol abuse (normoblastic)
- Normal MCV implies acute blood loss
- Iron deficiency anaemia – the most common anaemia in the world – canbe caused by many things and requires further investigation, for example:
- Blood loss – usually from GI tract
- Increased demand – e.g. in pregnancy, lactation, growth
- Reduced absorption – e.g. from gastrectomy (reduced acid) or coeliac disease (reduced intestinal absorption)
- Poor diet – generally contributes rather than causes specifically
- Normal MCHC should be 12 – 18gdL-1:
- 9 – 11 is classified as mild anaemia
- 6 – 9 is classified as moderate anaemia (difficulty breathing)
- 2 – 6 is classified as severe anaemia (risk of cardiac failure)
- Total iron binding capacity (TIBC) is increased in iron deficiency anaemia; bodily ferritin levels are reduced
- Oral iron supplements are usually sufficient as treatment; occasionally in severe cases parenteral[TG2] injections are administered, e.g. deep into muscles
[TG1]Microcyte: abnormally small RBC
[TG2]Administered by any way other than the mouth