Pathology

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    • Welcome to Pathology – Blood disorders!
    • Please tap in with your campus card and take a seat. Settle in and we'll begin in a bit....
    • Pathology: Blood Disorders
    • Dr Natasha Barrett
    • Lecture capture – new!

      Many lecture theatres are now set up to record the slides and audio of lectures as they are delivered (Yuja).
    • Any conversations near the microphone will be captured if recording is active ie. any Q&A / discussions.
    • Not all staff will be recording lectures.
    • Recordings (where available) will not be available immediately.
    • Learning Objectives

      • By the end of this session you should be able to:
      Describe several different blood disorders
      • Anaemia (RBCs)
      • Leukaemia (WBCs)
      • Thrombosis (platelets / coagulation)
      Including details of their...
      • Pathophysiology (see A&P notes)
      • Histology
      • Symptoms / signs
      • Diagnosis
      • Treatment / prevention
      • Prognosis
    • Blood - Anatomy
    • Red blood cells

      Part of blood that supplies oxygen to tissue and cells, and helps remove carbon dioxide
    • White blood cells

      Part of blood that helps fight infection
    • Platelets and plasma (clotting factors)

      Part of blood that prevents vascular leaking
    • RBCs - Anaemia
    • Signs and symptoms
    • Histology of RBCs

      Blood smear stained with Romanowsky stain:
      • Methylene blue stains nuclei purple
      • No nucleus
      • Eosin (counterstain) stains cytoplasmic proteins pink
      • Full of haemoglobin
      • No mitochondria
      • LOTS! 4-6 x 1012/L
      • Biconcave discs
      • 7-12µm, ~90fL
    • Pathophysiology
      Physiology (function) of RBCs: Transport of oxygen (bound to haemoglobin) and carbon dioxide around the body
      Pathophysiology: When the physiology goes wrong resulting in disease or disorders ie. Inability to transport sufficient O2 / CO2 around the body
    • Anaemia
      Reduced haemoglobin concentration in the blood
      • Reduces the oxygen carrying capacity of blood
      • Common condition, affecting 10% of women and 2-5% of men
      • Several different causes / classifications
      • Usually low haematocrit
      • May or may not cause low RBC count
      • May cause small pale RBCs
    • Common Causes of Anaemia

      • Acute bleeding (trauma, surgery)
      Chronic bleeding (GI, heavy menstruation)
      Iron deficiency (dietary, malabsorption, pregnancy)
      Folate / Vitamin B12 deficiency (dietary, malabsorption)
      Premature destruction of RBCs (haemolysis eg. Sickle cell)
    • Signs and Symptoms of Anaemia

      • Shortness of breath
      Tachycardia
      Pallor
      Fatigue
    • Diagnosis of Anaemia
    • Diagnosis of Anaemia
      • FBC
      • Anaemia Y/N
      • Hb concentration <120g/L
      • Cause / class
      • RBC count
      • Size of RBCs
      • Colour of RBCs
    • Treatment of Anaemia

      Depends on cause
      • Stop / address any bleeding
      • Iron rich foods, iron supplements, iron injections
      • Folate / B12 rich foods, supplements, B12 injections
      • Blood transfusion
      Prognosis – depends on the cause
    • A person with a normal RBC count can still be anaemic
    • Anaemia causes tachycardia
    • If you are anaemic you must need more iron
    • WBCs - Leukaemia
    • Histology of WBCs

      5 types of WBC
      • Fewer / larger than RBCs ~24μm
      • Romanowsky stain:
      • Methylene blue stains nuclei purple
      • Different shaped nuclei
      • Eosin stains cytoplasm pink
      • Granulocytes contain differently staining granules
    • Functions of WBCs (physiology)
      Neutrophils: Migrate out of blood into tissues where needed. Elevated in bacterial infection, stress, exercise.
      Lymphocytes: Sit in lymph nodes to screen lymph. Elevated in viral infection.
      Monocytes (macrophages in tissues): Clear cell debris. Elevated in infection, inflammation, tissue damage.
      Eosinophils: Role in allergy, intestinal parasites.
      Basophils: Role in allergy.
    • Pathophysiology
      When the physiology goes wrong (too much or too little).
    • Pathologies of WBCs

      • Deficiencies of WBCs eg. Neutropenia
      Autoimmune disorders (separate lecture)
      Infections (separate lecture)
      Leukaemia – cancer of the WBCs
    • Leukaemia
      Uncontrolled growth of one WBC type in the bone marrow
      in affected WBC type
      Bone marrow failure (over crowding)
    • 4 main classes of leukaemia

      • AML – acute myeloid leukaemia
      CML – chronic myeloid leukaemia
      CLL – chronic lymphoid leukaemia
      ALL – acute lymphoblastic leukaemia
    • Acute leukaemia – many immature WBCs
    • Chronic leukaemia – many maturing or mature WBCs
    • Common Causes of Leukaemia

      • Usually unknown cause
      Occasionally chemicals, radiation, viral or genetic
    • Signs and Symptoms of Leukaemia

      • Overcrowding of the bone marrow causes...
      Anaemia (SOB, fatigue)
      Leukopenia (recurrent infections)
      Thrombocytopenia (bleeding)
    • Diagnosis of Leukaemia
    • Diagnosis of Leukaemia

      • FBC
      affected WBC type
      other WBCs
      RBCs
      platelets
      Bone marrow biopsy
      immature WBCs
      Histology of WBCs
      Possibly enlarged nuclei (immature blast cells)
    • Treatment of Leukaemia

      • Chemotherapy
      Bone marrow transplant
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