Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Hemolytic Anemias

Hemolytic Anemias

Hemolytic Anemias

On this page

HA Overview & Types - Red Cell Rundown

  • Hemolytic Anemia (HA): Premature RBC destruction (lifespan < 100-120 days); anemia if marrow compensation fails.
  • Key Markers: Reticulocytosis, ↑LDH, ↑Indirect Bilirubin, ↓Haptoglobin (more in IVH).
  • Classification:
    • Site:
      • Intravascular (IVH): In circulation; severe; schistocytes.
      • Extravascular (EVH): In spleen/liver; common; spherocytes.
    • Cause:
      • Intrinsic: Defect within RBC (e.g., membrane, enzyme, Hb).
      • Extrinsic: External factor damaging RBC (e.g., immune, mechanical).

⭐ Extravascular hemolysis (e.g., in spleen, liver) is more common and generally less severe than intravascular hemolysis. Intravascular vs Extravascular Hemolysis Mechanisms

HA Diagnosis - Spotting the Signs

  • Clinical Clues: Pallor, jaundice (icterus), splenomegaly, dark urine (hemoglobinuria).
  • Initial Labs (The "Hemolysis Panel"):
    • CBC: ↓Hb, ↓Hct.
    • Peripheral Smear: Key for morphology (e.g., spherocytes, schistocytes).
    • Reticulocyte Count: ↑ (Reticulocyte Production Index, RPI > 2-3).
    • LDH: ↑ (marker of cell breakdown).
    • Indirect Bilirubin: ↑.
    • Haptoglobin: ↓ (binds free Hb).
    • Urine: Hemoglobinuria, hemosiderinuria.
  • Specific Tests:
    • Direct Antiglobulin Test (DAT/Coombs): Positive in AIHA.

⭐ A reticulocyte count corrected for anemia (Reticulocyte Production Index, RPI > 2-3) is the hallmark of hemolytic anemias, indicating appropriate bone marrow response.

Red blood cell morphology in anemia

Inherited HA - Born This Way

  • RBC Membrane Defects: Structural abnormalities leading to premature RBC destruction.
    • Hereditary Spherocytosis (HS): Most common inherited HA in Northern Europeans. Autosomal Dominant (AD) typically (75%). Defects in ankyrin, spectrin, band 3, or protein 4.2.
      • Clinical Triad: Anemia, jaundice, splenomegaly. Gallstones common. Aplastic crisis (Parvovirus B19).
      • Labs: Spherocytes (↓MCV, ↑MCHC), reticulocytosis. Osmotic fragility test (+), EMA binding test (flow cytometry) is diagnostic.
      • Rx: Folic acid. Splenectomy for moderate/severe cases (usually after age 5-6 years) cures hemolysis but spherocytes persist.
    • Hereditary Elliptocytosis (HE) & Pyropoikilocytosis (HPP): Spectrin defects. HE often asymptomatic or mild; HPP is severe.
  • RBC Enzyme Defects: Impaired RBC metabolism.
    • G6PD Deficiency: X-linked recessive. Most common enzyme defect. ↓G6PD → ↓NADPH → oxidative stress vulnerability.

      ⭐ In G6PD deficiency, acute hemolysis is typically triggered by oxidative stress (e.g., drugs like primaquine, infections, fava beans), leading to Heinz body formation.

      • Labs: Heinz bodies (denatured Hb, visible with crystal violet/supravital stain), bite cells. G6PD enzyme assay (NB: perform weeks after acute episode as young RBCs have higher G6PD).
    • Pyruvate Kinase (PK) Deficiency: Autosomal Recessive (AR). ↓ATP → rigid RBCs → extravascular hemolysis. Second most common enzyme defect.
      • Clinical: Neonatal jaundice, chronic hemolysis, splenomegaly. No specific crisis triggers like G6PD.
      • Labs: Echinocytes (burr cells). PK enzyme assay.

Bite and blister cells in hemolytic anemia

Acquired HA - Attack from Outside

  • Immune-Mediated:
    • Autoimmune (AIHA):
      • Warm AIHA (IgG, extravascular hemolysis; DAT: IgG ± C3)
      • Cold Agglutinin Disease (IgM, complement, intravascular hemolysis; DAT: C3)
      • Paroxysmal Cold Hemoglobinuria (PCH; Donath-Landsteiner Ab, IgG)
    • Alloimmune: Hemolytic Disease of Fetus & Newborn (HDFN; maternal IgG), Transfusion reactions.
  • Non-Immune Mediated:
    • Microangiopathic Hemolytic Anemia (MAHA): TTP, HUS, DIC; Schistocytes.
    • Infections: Malaria, Clostridia, Babesia.
    • Drugs/Toxins: e.g., Penicillin (immune), Dapsone (oxidative), Lead.
    • Mechanical Trauma: Prosthetic valves, March hemoglobinuria.
    • Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria (PNH): Acquired GPI-anchor defect (↓CD55/CD59); intravascular hemolysis, thrombosis.
    • Hypersplenism.

AIHA Diagnostic Algorithm

⭐ Warm AIHA is typically IgG-mediated and extravascular, while Cold Agglutinin Disease is IgM-mediated and can cause intravascular hemolysis upon cold exposure.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Hereditary Spherocytosis: AD, spectrin defect; ↑ MCHC, positive osmotic fragility test.
  • G6PD Deficiency: X-linked, episodic hemolysis from oxidant stress (drugs, fava); Heinz bodies, bite cells.
  • Sickle Cell Anemia: HbS (Glu→Val); vaso-occlusion, autosplenectomy, Parvovirus B19 aplastic crisis.
  • Beta-Thalassemia Major: Severe anemia, hepatosplenomegaly, "chipmunk facies" (extramedullary hematopoiesis), transfusion-dependent.
  • AIHA: Warm (IgG) vs Cold (IgM); Direct Coombs Test is key diagnostic.
  • PNH: Acquired PIGA mutation, CD55/CD59 deficiency; causes intravascular hemolysis, thrombosis.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE