MLS 610 hematology questions

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Flashcards on MLS 610 hematology questions, created by Daniel Li on 02/09/2019.
Daniel Li
Flashcards by Daniel Li, updated more than 1 year ago
Daniel Li
Created by Daniel Li almost 5 years ago
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Question Answer
The process of formation and development of blood cells is called hematopoiesis
During second trimester of fetal development, primary site of blood cell production is Liver
Which organ is responsible for the maturation of T lymphocytes and regulating CD4 and CD8 expression thymus
The best source of bone marrow for a 20 year old would be iliac crest
Physiologic programmed cell death is called apoptosis
Which organ sequesters platelets? Spleen
What morphological change occurs during normal blood cell maturation? Condensation of nuclear chromatin
What cell is a product of the CLP? T lymphocyte
What cells are products of GMP? granulocytes and monocytes
What growth factor is produced in kidneys and used to treat anemia? EPO
What cytokine is involved in early differentiation of HSCs? FLT3 ligand
What is one response to inadequate red cell production in severe anemia? extramedullary hematopoiesis in liver and spleen
HSC's can adequately produce all lineages of blood cells over a lifetime because they Can self renew through asymmetric division
What cells are produced by MEPs? Megakaryocytes and erythrocytes
What is an erythrocyte progenitor? HSC MEP CFU-E
What is the most mature normoblast? Orthochromic normoblast
What erythroid precursor is blue pink with condensed chromatin and no nucleoli? Polychromatic normoblast
What does EPO affect? number of normoblast divisions, time between divisions, production of antiapoptotic molecules by progenitors
Hypoxia stimulates RBC production by stimulating EPO production in kidneys
In bone marrow RBC precursors are located surrounding macrophages in erythroid islands
What determines timing of egress of RBC from bone marrow Normoblasts lose CAM receptors for stromal cells as they mature
What is most responsible for limiting normal RBC lifespan Loss of nucleus
Fragmentation hemolysis is due to trauma to RBCs while in circulation
Extravascular hemolysis occurs when splenic macrophages ingest senescent cells
A pronormoblast belongs to the erythron but not the red cell mass
A cell with N:C of 4:1 is mostly composed of nucleus
What RBC process doesnt require energy? oxygen transport
What pathway generates ATP anaerobically? Embden Meyerhof pathway
What is the role of 2,3 BPG? Enhances O2 release from hemoglobin
What byproduct detoxifies peroxides in RBCs? NADPH and reduced glutathione
What helps maintain RBC shape? Cytoskeletal proteins
Glycolipids of the RBC membrane carry RBC antigens
RBC membranes block large molecules but allow cations and small molecules to pass, this is called semipermeability
RBC membrane phospholipids are arranged in two layers that are asymmetric
RBC membrane cholesterol is replenished from plasma
What portion of the Embden-Meyerhof pathway reduces iron to the physiologic +2 from +3? Methemoglobin reductase pathway
What is an example of an integral protein? Glycophorin A
Abnormal membrane protein linkages may be seen as changes in cell shape
A hemoglobin molecule is made of one heme and four globin chains
What chains are Hemoglobin A made of alpha and beta
The rate limiting step in heme synthesis is suppression of Protoporphyrin IX reductase
What form of hemoglobin is lowest affinity for oxygen? tense
In more acidic blood, which way is the hemoglobin oxygen dissociation curve shifted? Shifted to the right, reduced oxygen affinity
Which hemoglobin is predominant in newborns Hemoglobin F
What is the hemoglobin types from most to least common in healthy adults? A, A2, F
What is the structure of oxidized hemoglobin? Iron in ferric 3+ state and unable to bind oxygen, also known as methemoglobin
Globin subunits in hemoglobin form into two dimers of alpha-beta chains
Alpha and beta genes are on separate chromosomes but alpha genes are on the same one
2,3 BPG acts by binding the globin chains to release oxygen from heme
Iron is transported in plasma by transferrin
Most available iron in the body is stored as ferritin
Transferrin can be measured by Serum total iron binding capacity
What test best reflects iron deficiency? soluble transferrin receptor (proportional to the amount of transferrin receptor upregulated by cell iron demand)
What membrane protein in enterocytes transports iron from the intestinal lumen? DMT1
How is iron incorporated into heme? DMT1 moves ferric iron into enterocytes, ferroportin moves iron into plasma, transferrin binds ferric iron, transferrin receptor moves the transferrin iron complex into cell, iron is moved to the mitochondria
Iron is removed from cells by ferroportin
After endocytosis, transferrin receptor is recycled into the plasma membrane to bind more transferrin
What regulates release of iron from enterocytes? Hepcidin
How do you calculate percent transferrin saturation? Total serum iron/total serum iron binding capacity
What are the axes of a Thomas plot? Hemoglobin content of reticulocytes vs soluble transferrin receptor/log ferritin
Neutrophils and monocytes are direct descendants of a common progenitor known as GMP
The stage in neutrophilic development where the nucleus is indented in a kidney shape and cytoplasm has lavendar secondary granules is called Metamyelocyte
Type II myeloblasts are categorized by Less than 20 primary granules per cell
What is the function of neutrophils? Nonspecific destruction of foreign organisms
What immune cells regulate the immune response, mediate allergic inflammation, and destroy helminths? Basophils and eosinophils
What class of immunoglobulin reacts with basophils and mast cells? IgE
What cell type can differentiate into macrophages, osteoclasts, or dendritic cells? Monocytes
Macrophages role in adaptive immunity is degrading antigen and presenting it to lymphocytes
What is a B cell's final stage after activation? Plasma cell
What megakaryocyte progenitor undergoes endomitosis? LD-CFU-Meg
What growth factor induces megakaryocyte growth and differentiation? TPO
What platelet organelle sequesters ionic calcium? DTS
What platelet membrane receptor binds fibrinogen and supports platelet aggregation? GP IIb/IIIa
What platelet membrane phospholipid flips to the plasma side and serves as the assembly point for coagulation factors? Phosphatidylserine
What eicosanoid metabolite produced by endos suppresses platelet activity? prostacyclin
What molecule is stored in platelet dense granules? serotonin
What plasma protein is needed for platelet adhesion? VWF
Reticulated platelets can be enumerated in peripheral blood to detect increased platelet production
platelet adhesion refers to platelets binding to surfaces such as subendothelial collagen
If potassium cyanide and potassium ferricyanide are used to determine hemoglobin concentration the final product is cyanmethemoglobin
What interferes with cyanmethemoglobin method of hemoglobin determination? increased lipids, lyse resistant RBCs, increased WBC count
What does reticulocyte count assess? Erythropoietic activity of bone marrow
What happens to ESR if there is inflammation? Increases
On automated CBC machines, what is hematocrit calculated from? MCV
If MCHC is elevated and the peripheral shows agglutination, what will RBC count and MCV show? RBC count will decrease and MCV will increase
Low voltage DC is used by automated machines to measure total cell volume
Orthogonal light scatter is used to measure internal complexity of the cell
What are common clinical symptoms of anemia? fatigue and shortness of breath
What should be considered in a patient's history when investigating anemia? diet and medications, occupation, hobbies, travel, bleeding episodes in family members
What is reduced in long standing anemia? oxygen affinity of hemoglobin
Anemia where HSC's are diminished but RBC precursors are normal is considered anemia by mechanism of insufficient erythropoiesis
What test value indicates shortened RBC lifespan and hemolytic anemia? increased red cell distribution width
Poikilocytosis is detected by peripheral smear examination
In men and postmenopausal women with adequate diet, iron deficiency anemia most often results from chronic GI bleeding
When would levels of free erythrocyte protoporphyrin be increased? Any condition where iron cannot be incorporated into protoporphyrin IX
Hepcidin levels in anemia of chronic inflammation increase during inflammation and reduce iron absorption from enterocytes
sideroblastic anemias are caused by failure to incorporate iron into protoporphyrin IX
Clinical consequences of pancytopenia are fatigue, infection, and bleeding
Acquired aplastic anemia that is idiopathic has no known cause
Acquired idiosyncratic aplastic anemia is caused by destruction of stem cells by autoimmune response
What would you expect to find in a peripheral smear for severe aplastic anemia? macrocytosis, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia
Anemia caused by chronic kidney disease is caused by inadequate production of EPO
Unlike inherited aplastic anemia, Diamond Blackfan anemia only affects erythropoiesis
Define hemolytic disorder Disorder with increased destruction of RBCs after they enter the bloodstream
Both fragmentation and macrophage mediated hemolysis will result in elevated urobilinogen in urine (from bilirubin metabolism)
What test is a good indicator of accelerated erythropoiesis? reticulocyte count
What is consistent with megaloblastic anemia? Increased MCV
If folate levels are decreased but B12 levels are normal, what would you expect methylmalonic acid to be? Normal because it depends on B12
If folate levels are decreased but B12 levels are normal, what do you expect homocysteine levels to be? Increased since folate deficiency causes accumulation of homocysteine
If folate levels are normal and B12 levels are decreased, what do you expect methylmalonic acid levels to be? elevated
Megaloblastic anemia can also be categorized as macrocytic
Besides macrocytosis, megaloblastic anemia can be characterized by hypersegmentation of neutrophils
What would you expect to find with elevated titers of intrinsic factor blocking antibodies? hypersegmented neutrophils, macrocytic RBC, low B12 levels, high levels of methylmalonic acid
What is the role of intrinsic factor? facilitates absorption of vitamin B12 and is secreted by parietal cells in stomach
What is the dominant metabolically active form of B12 Holotranscobalamin
Folate and vitamin B12 work together to produce DNA
Why does megaloblastic anemia cause macrocytosis? Lack of genetic material results in a reduction in the number of cell divisions despite normal cytoplasm development
Pernicious anemia most commonly affects Persons older than 60
What would you expect to find in classical fragmentation hemolysis? schistocytes, elevated total and indirect serum bilirubin, increased urinary urobilinogen, severely decreased haptoglobin
What is a distinct symptom of hemolytic anemia? Jaundice
What would you expect to find for macrophage mediated hemolytic anemia vs fragmentation anemia? Spherocytosis
Where is the majority of urobilinogen excreted? in the intestines
For hereditary spherocytosis, what do you expect to see in the CBC Increased MCHC
Hereditary spherocytosis results in cells with increased osmotic fragility, negative DAT, polychromasia
Hereditary elliptocytosis is caused by defects in horizontal membrane protein interactions
What do you expect to see in hereditary pyropoikilocytosis poikilocytosis, increased RDW, thermal sensitivity, microspherocytosis
Acanthocytes are associated with abetalipoproteinemia (fat soluble vitamin absorption deficiency), McLeod's disease, severe liver disease
G6PD deficiency is most commonly manifested as Acute hemolytic anemia caused by drug exposure or infection
The most common cause of hereditary non-spherocytic hemolytic anemia is pyruvate kinase deficiency
What feature is found in all microangiopathic hemolytic anemias? intravascular RBC fragmentation
Typical findings in thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura and hemolytic uremic syndrome are schistocytes and thrombocytopenia
Idiopathic TTP is caused by Autoimmune antibodies binding ADAMTS-13 (which normally regulated VWF) and causing VWF platelet thrombi
What abnormal test results distinguish DIC from TTP or HUS? PT and PTT (DIC depletes coagulation factors)
What does haptoglobin do? Binds and removes free hemoglobin in circulation
Which plasmodium can cause malaria relapses? P. vivax
How does malaria cause anemia? Lysis of infected RBCs, immune response mediated destruction of RBCs, inhibition of erythropoiesis
What RBC morphology is seen after a severe burn injury? microspherocytes and schistocytes (like in hereditary pyropoikilocytosis)
TTP unlike HUS displays a large increase in serum lactate dehydrogenase
Immune hemolytic anemia is caused by alloantibody or autoantibody against RBC antigen
Immune hemolysis with IgM antibodies is mediated by compleMent
What RBC is typically found in IgG mediated hemolysis? spherocytes
Positive DAT in autoimmune hemolytic anemia is evidence that IgG antibody is sensitizing the patient's red blood cells
What are mechanisms of drug induced hemolytic anemia? antibody production to drug after membrane adsorption, antibody to drug complexed to an RBC membrane protein, induction of RBC autoantibody production
Drug adsorption induced AIHA occurs extravascularly
DHTR (delayed hemolytic transfusion reaction) is due to an anamnestic response after repeat exposure to a blood group antigen
Chronic secondary cold agglutinin disease is most often associated with B cell malignancy
A qualitative abnormality in hemoglobin incudes any modification in the amino acids in a globin chain
When do patients with sickle cell disease usually exhibit symptoms 6 months old, when Hb F starts to decrease
Megalobastic anemia in SCD can be prevented by prophylactic administration of folic acid
Whats the most definitive test for Hb S? Hb electrophoresis at acidic pH
A blood film of an anemic patient with target cells, nucleated RBCs, and hexagonal crystals inside of RBCs indicates Hb CC, a substitution (lys>glu) in structure of beta globin chains
Thalassemias are caused by absent or defective synthesis of a polypeptide chain in hemoglobin
Hemolytic anemia associated with thalassemias is caused by imbalance of globin chain synthesis
B thalassemia minor will cause an increase in which Hb? Increased HbA2
B Thalassemia RBCs will usually be microcytic, hypochromia, elliptocytes, target cells, stippling
The predominant Hb in B thalassemia major is Hb F
Hb H is formed by tetramer of beta chains
Hb Bart is formed by tetramer of gamma chains
Sickle trait thalassemia progression resembles sickle cell anemia
A peripheral film that shows increased neutrophils, basophils, eosinophils, and platelets is highly suggestive of CML
A patient previously diagnosed with CML has circulating blasts and pros that total 30% of leukocytes, what phase is the disease Transformation into AML
For PV peripheral blood findings typically include erythrocytosis, granulocytosis, and thrombocytosis
A patient with platelet count of 700, observed abnormalities in platelet size/shape/granularity, a white count of 12, hemoglobin 11, and no Philadelphia chromosome is most likely to be diagnosed with Essential thrombocytosis
What are some common complications associated with ET? thrombosis, hemorrhage, and seizures
What would you expect to find in the peripheral for a patient with Primary myelofibrosis? dacrocytes, nucleated RBCs, IGs
Myelofibrosis in PMF is caused by increased stimulatory cytokines enhancing fibroblast activity
A patient previously diagnosed with CML has circulating blasts and pros that total 20% of leukocytes, what phase is the disease accelerated
Myelodysplastic syndromes are most common in age group of older than 50 years
What finding in peripheral blood and bone marrow examination is a major indication of MDS Dyspoiesis
Peripheral findings in MDS may include Oval macrocytes, agranular neutrophils, micromegakaryocytes, basophilic cytoplasm, giant platelets, ring sideroblasts, hypochromic microcytes, multinucleated RBCs
The mitochondria of a ringed sideroblast encircles one third of the nucleus
What test would be best for differential of a patient with anemia, oval macrocytes, and hypersegmented neutrophils? B12 and folate level test because it could be an MDS or a macrocytic anemia
MDS often converts to AML
CML is classified by WHO as bpth a myeloproliferative neoplasm and a myelodysplastic syndrome
The minimum percentage of blasts necessary for a diagnosis of acute leukemia is 20%
A favorable sign for the prognosis of children diagnosed with ALL is hyperdiploidy
Cerebral infiltration with blasts is more commonly seen in ALL
Tumor lysis syndrome is associated with Renal failure after initial chemotherapy
Pure erythroid leukemia is a disorder involving pronormoblasts and basophilic normoblasts
The most common lymphoma in young adults is Hodgkins lymphoma
The major difference between Hodgkin lymphoma and other B cell lymphomas is presence of numerous reactive lymphocytes but only a few malignant cells
The function of the lymph node germinal center is generating B cells that produce immunoglobulins with highest affinity for a presented antigen
B cells can produce highly specific immunoglobulins by process of somatic mutation
Marked paracortical expansion is most commonly seen in dermatophilic lymphadenopathy
The intimal cell that synthesizes VWF is endothelial cell
Factor VII activation is triggered by the structural protein Tissue Factor
If platelets are not aggregating properly, an assay should be done for fibrinogen
Vitamin K will carboxylate pt group factors to allow calcium binding
fibrinopeptides A and B are produced by activation proteolysis of fibrinogen by thrombin
What factor is fibrinogen? factor I
What is factor II prothrombin
Factor IX complexes with Factor VIII to act on Factor X
Factor VIII circulates bound to VWF
Most coagulation factors are synthesized by the liver
What is a typical form of anatomic bleeding? soft tissue bleed
The typical treatment for vitamin K deficiency is vitamin K and plasma
Systemic bleeding is distinguished by mucocutaneous hemorrhage such as petechiae, purpura, or ecchymoses
Primary hemostasis defect is often manifested as gum bleeding, epistaxis, hematemesis, menorrhagia
Anatomic bleeding is usually associated with defects in secondary hemostasis, such as prolonged bleed after a minor trauma or surgical procedure
Thrombin time is an assay for fibrinogen availability
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