Anemia Basics - Red Cell Rundown
- WHO Definition: Hb levels: Men <13 g/dL; Women (non-preg) <12 g/dL; Women (preg) <11 g/dL.
- MCV Classification (RBC size):
- Microcytic: MCV <80 fL (small)
- Normocytic: MCV 80-100 fL (normal)
- Macrocytic: MCV >100 fL (large)
- Key Red Cell Indices:
- MCV: Mean Corpuscular Volume.
- RDW: Red Cell Distribution Width (anisocytosis).
- Reticulocyte Count: Bone marrow RBC production.

⭐ RDW is typically increased in Iron Deficiency Anemia (IDA) but normal in Thalassemia trait, aiding microcytic anemia differentiation.
Diagnostic Drilldown - Sleuthing Anemia
- Clinical Clues: Detailed history (diet, blood loss, drugs, family Hx), thorough exam (pallor, jaundice, glossitis, koilonychia, splenomegaly).
- Core Labs:
- CBC: Hb, MCV (<80 Micro, 80-100 Normo, >100 Macro fL), MCHC, RDW.
- Reticulocyte Count: Index marrow response. Reticulocyte Production Index (RPI) <2 indicates hypoproliferation.
- Peripheral Smear: RBC morphology (key diagnostic clues!), WBC & platelet assessment.
- Targeted Tests (MCV/RPI-guided):
- Iron studies (Serum Ferritin, Fe, TIBC, %Saturation).
- Serum B12/Folate levels.
- Hemolysis screen (LDH, Indirect Bilirubin, Haptoglobin, Coombs test).
- Hb Electrophoresis (thalassemia, hemoglobinopathies).
- Bone Marrow Exam (if diagnosis remains unclear).

⭐ Serum ferritin <15-30 ng/mL is the most specific non-invasive test for iron deficiency anemia (IDA).
Key Anemia Types - Common Culprits
| Feature | Iron Deficiency Anemia (IDA) | B12 Deficiency (Cobalamin) | Folate Deficiency |
|---|---|---|---|
| RBC Indices | Microcytic (MCV < 80), hypochromic, ↑RDW | Macrocytic (MCV > 100), megaloblastic, ↑RDW | Macrocytic (MCV > 100), megaloblastic, ↑RDW |
| Etiology | Chronic blood loss, ↓intake/absorption, pregnancy | Pernicious anemia, gastrectomy, ileal disease, veganism | ↓Intake (alcohol, diet), ↑demand (pregnancy), drugs (MTX) |
| Key Labs | ↓Ferritin (< 30 ng/mL), ↓Fe, ↑TIBC, ↓Tsat (< 15%) | ↓Serum B12, ↑MMA, ↑Homocysteine; Anti-IF Ab+ | ↓Serum/RBC Folate, Normal MMA, ↑Homocysteine |
| Clinical | Pica, koilonychia, glossitis, fatigue | Neuro sx (SCD), glossitis, jaundice | Glossitis, fatigue; NO neuro sx |
| PBS | Pencil cells, target cells | Hypersegmented neutrophils (>5 lobes), oval macrocytes | Hypersegmented neutrophils (>5 lobes), oval macrocytes |
⭐ In B12 deficiency, neurological symptoms (e.g., subacute combined degeneration) can precede or occur without macrocytic anemia.
Other Anemias & Tx - Beyond Basics
- Hemolytic Anemias:
- Types: Intrinsic (e.g., G6PD deficiency, Sickle Cell, Thalassemia) vs. Extrinsic (e.g., AIHA, MAHA).
- Key Tests: ↑LDH, ↑Indirect Bilirubin, ↓Haptoglobin, Reticulocytosis. Peripheral smear (schistocytes, spherocytes).
- Anemia of Chronic Disease (ACD):
- Pathophysiology: ↑Hepcidin → ↓Iron absorption & release from stores.
- Labs: ↓Serum Fe, ↓/Normal TIBC, ↑/Normal Ferritin.
- Aplastic Anemia:
- Hallmark: Pancytopenia with a hypocellular bone marrow.
- Key: Often no hepatosplenomegaly or lymphadenopathy.

- General Management & Transfusion:
- Treat the underlying cause first.
- Transfusion Triggers:
⭐ In Aplastic Anemia, the absence of hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy is a crucial finding, helping differentiate it from hematological malignancies that can also present with pancytopenia.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Initial anemia workup: CBC, reticulocyte count, peripheral smear.
- MCV classifies anemia: Microcytic (IDA, thalassemia), Normocytic (ACD), Macrocytic (megaloblastic).
- Iron Deficiency Anemia: ↓Ferritin, ↑TIBC; koilonychia, pencil cells.
- Megaloblastic Anemia: B12/Folate deficiency; hypersegmented neutrophils; neuropathy in B12 deficiency.
- Anemia of Chronic Disease: ↑Ferritin (or normal), ↓serum iron, ↓TIBC.
- Hemolytic Anemias: Reticulocytosis, ↑LDH, ↑indirect bilirubin; specific red cell morphology.
- Beta-Thalassemia Minor: Microcytic with ↑HbA2 (>3.5%) and target cells.
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