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Anemia Door Mind Map: Anemia

1. Normocytic anemia

1.1. Anemia of CKD

1.1.1. Caused by EPO deficiency

1.1.2. Iron-therapy & ESAs are treatments

1.1.2.1. ESAs ineffective if iron stores are low

1.1.2.2. Epoetin alfa (Procrit, Epogen)

1.1.2.2.1. If CKD: 3x/week when Hgb < 10 g/dL; reduce or interrupt when Hgb = 11

1.1.2.2.2. On chemo: start when Hgb < 10

1.1.2.2.3. BBW: :arrow_up: risk of death, MI, stroke, VTE, thrombosis; use lowest effective dose

1.1.2.3. Darbepoetin (Aranesp)

1.1.2.3.1. CKD: IV or SC QW (longer 1/2 life)

2. Aplastic anemia

2.1. Tx can include immunosuppressants, transfusions, or stem cell transplant

2.2. **Eltrombopag (promacta)**

2.2.1. thrombopoetin nonpeptide agonist which increases platelet counts (for severe aplastic anemia who are unresponsive to other tx

3. Hemolytic anemia

3.1. Can be drug-induced or inherited

3.1.1. Coombs test to rule out drug-induced

3.2. G6PD deficiency

3.2.1. Most people don't need tx but should avoid high-risk meds

3.2.1.1. Cephalosporins, Dapsone, isoniazid, levodopa, methyldopa, methylene blue, nitrofurantoin, PCNs, quinines, rasburicase, sulfonamides, rifampin

4. RBC Production

4.1. RBCs form in bone marrow where they take up Hgb & iron before being released as immature RBCs - **reticulocytes**

4.1.1. After 1-2 days, mature into **erythrocytes** which have a lifespan of **~120 days**

5. Causes of anemia

5.1. Impaired RBC production

5.2. Increased RBC destruction (hemolysis)

5.3. Blood loss

5.3.1. Decrease in Hgb or RBC volume results in :arrow_down: O2 carrying capacity

5.4. Nutritional deficiencies (iron, folate, B12)

5.4.1. If iron deficient, can cause glossitis, spooned nails, or pica

5.4.2. If B12 deficient, neurologic symptoms including peripheral neuropathies, visual disturbances, &/or psych symptoms

5.5. Complication of CKD or malignancy

6. Types of anemia

6.1. Depends on MCV

6.1.1. MCV < 80 = **microcytic**

6.1.1.1. Likely iron deficiency

6.1.2. MCV 80-100 = **normocytic**

6.1.2.1. Acute blood loss, malignancy, CKD, aplastic anemia, hemolysis

6.1.3. MCV > 100 = **macrocytic**

6.1.3.1. Likely B12 or folate deficiency

7. Iron-deficiency anemia

7.1. Causes

7.1.1. Iron-poor diets (e.g. vegetarian, vegan), malnutrition, disease-related (e.g. dementia, psychosis)

7.1.2. Blood loss

7.1.2.1. Acute = GI hemorrhage

7.1.2.2. Chronic = heavy menses, blood donations, PUD, IBD

7.1.2.3. Drug-induced = NSAIDs, steroids, antiplatelets, anticoagulants

7.1.3. Decreased absorption

7.1.3.1. High gastric pH (PPI use), GI diseases (celiac, IBD, gastrectomy, gastric bypass)

7.1.4. Increased iron requirements (pregnancy, lactation)

7.2. Treatment

7.2.1. PO Iron; 100-200mg elemental iron per day

7.2.1.1. Take on empty stomach; avoid/separate from antacids

7.2.2. % Elemental iron in PO products

7.2.2.1. Gluconate = 12%

7.2.2.2. Sulfate = 20%

7.2.2.2.1. **FeroSul**

7.2.2.3. Sulfate dried = 30%

7.2.2.3.1. **Slow Fe**

7.2.2.4. Fumarate = 33%

7.2.2.5. Carbonyl iron, polysaccharide iron complex, ferric maltol = 100%

7.2.2.5.1. **ferric maltol (Accrufer)**

7.2.3. Parenteral iron

7.2.3.1. Limited to CKD on hemodialysis, CKD receiving ESAs, unable to tolerate PO iron

7.2.3.2. **Iron sucrose (Venofer)**

7.2.3.2.1. BBW: Serious/fatal anaphylaxis w/ iron dextran or ferumoxytol

7.2.3.3. **Ferumoxytol (Feraheme)**

8. Macrocytic anemia

8.1. B12 usually caused by pernicious anemia which is due to lack of intrinsic factor (required for adequate B12 absorption

8.1.1. Dx by (+) AutoAb test to IF

8.1.2. Requires lifelong B12 replacement

8.2. Other causes include alcoholism, poor nutrition, GI disorders (Crohn's, celiac), & pregnancy

8.2.1. Also, long-term use of metformin, H2RAs, PPIs

8.3. Treatment

8.3.1. B12 injections considered 1st line

8.3.1.1. IM daily, weekly, or monthly depending on severity

8.3.2. **Nascobal**

8.3.2.1. 500mcg in one nostril QW

8.4. B12/folate interactions

8.4.1. Chloramphenicol can :arrow_down: efficacy of B12

8.4.2. Colchicine can :arrow_down: abs of B12