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Chapter 5
Acquired underproduction anemias
Erythrocyte production requires the presence of bone marrow stem cells, erythropoietin (EPO), elemental iron, vitamins, cytokines, and a suitable marrow microenvironment. Deficiency or unavailability of any of these key components may lead to the underproduction of erythrocytes and result in anemia. Normal erythropoiesis follows an ordered progression from the pluripotent colony-forming unit—granulocyte erythroid-monocyte macrophage (CFUGEMM), to the burst-forming units—erythroid (BFU-E), to colony-forming units—erythroid (CFU-E), to proerythro-blasts, to erythroblasts, and finally to mature erythrocytes (see Figure 12-1). Red blood cell (RBC) maturation is dependent on the presence of EPO, a 165—amino acid glycoprotein produced by the kidney. EPO acts via cross-linkage
Underproduction anemias resulting from nutritional deficiencies
Iron Iron deficiency anemia Anemia of chronic disease/inflammation (dysregulation of iron)
Megaloblastic anemias
Cobalamin (vitamin B12) deficiency Folic acid deficiency Other causes of megaloblastic anemia Nonmyelodysplastic sideroblastic anemias Anemia from malnutrition and trace element deficiencies
Underproduction anemias resulting from organ dysfunction
Kidney disease Anemia from endocrine abnormalities Anemia associated with GI abnormalities Anemia associated with liver disease
Marrow failure states leading to underproduction anemias
Pure red cell aplasia
Anemia secondary to marrow infiltration or abnormalities in the marrow microenvironment
Complex/multifactorial anemias
Anemia associated with pregnancy Anemia of the elderly Anemia of cancer Anemia associated with HIV | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||