Term
How do you differentiate blood loss and hemolysis anemia? |
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Definition
-Blood loss: normal-low protein, evidence of bleeding, negative Coomb's test -Hemolysis: normal-high protein, icterus, hemoglobinemia, spherocytosis, hemosiderinuria, autoagglutination, Direct Coombs test, splenomegaly, RBC changes |
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Term
What are some acute causes of blood loss anemia? |
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Definition
-hemoabdomen: HSA, rodenticide toxicity --severe thrombocytopenia: urinary, GI, subcutaneous, epistaxis |
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Term
What are some chronic causes of blood loss anemia? |
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Definition
-GI hemorrhage: ulcer, neoplaisa -Intestinal parasites: hookworm -ectoparasites: severe flea infestation -Chronic meight have a normal TP |
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Term
What clinical signs are associated with bleeding in the following locations: a) GI b) urinary c) epistaxis d) hemoabdomen e) pulmonary/hemothorax |
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Definition
a) GI: melena, hematemesis b) Urinary: hematuria, stranguria, pollakiuria c) epistaxis: nose bleed, nasal signs d) Hemoabdomen: abdominal distention, discomfort e) pulmonary/hemothorax: tachypnea, resp distress |
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Term
If you suspect chronic bleeding, what should you make sure to add to your PE? |
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Definition
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Term
What are some clinical signs that indicate the location of bleeding? |
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Definition
-rectal exam: melena -pettechiae or ecchymosis -excessive fleas -fluid wave: hemoabdomen -dec ventral lung sounds: hemothorax |
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Term
What are the 3 major diagnostics we run on a patient suspected of blood loss? |
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Definition
-CBC: platelet count! RBC morphology, retic count, indices, PCV -Chem panel: dec TP, inc BUN -PT/PTT |
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Term
Is blood loss anemia usually non-regenerative or regenerative? Exceptions? |
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Definition
-regenerative -acute or iron deficiency anemia |
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Term
What does a UA of a blood loss anemia case look like? |
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Definition
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Term
What can imaging show in cases of blood loss anemia? |
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Definition
-Thracic: pulmonary edema, hemothorax -Abdominal radiographs: hemoabddomen -Abdominal ultrasound: hemoabdomen, splenic or liver masses, GI ulceration, blood clot within bladder |
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Term
What diagnostics do we run on GI bleeding? |
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Definition
-complete history: NSAID use -fecal occult blood: if negative helps to rule-out GI blood loss |
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Term
What diagnostics do we run for testing infectious diseases in suspected cases of blood loss anemia? |
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Definition
-fecal float for intestinal parasites |
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Term
What are the main 3 features of treatment of a case of blood loss anemia? |
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Definition
-blood transfusion -STOP the bleeding --treat the underlying cause |
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Term
How do we treat the following underlying causes of blood loss anemia: a) GI b) parasites c) coagulopathy d) iron deficiency anemia |
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Definition
a) acid suppressants, protectants b) antiparasitic agents c) treat underlying cause of severe thrombocytopenia, plasma and Vit K1 for secondary hemostasis abnormalities d) iron supplementation (injectionn > oral) |
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Term
What is erythrocytosis? What is a relative erythrocytosis? What about absolute? |
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Definition
-inc in circulating RBC mass (inc PCV or HCT) -erythrocytosis due to hemoconcentration (dehydration) -absolute: true inc in PCV (primary or secondary) |
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Term
Which breed of dog normally exhibited erythrocyosis? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the most common cause of relative erythrocytosis? Other causes? |
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Definition
-dehydration -hemorhaggic enterocolitis |
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Term
How do we diagnose and treat relative erythrocytosis? |
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Definition
-history/PE and TP -IV fluid therapy |
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Term
What are some characteristics of primary absolute erythrocytosis? |
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Definition
-polycythemia rubra vera (RARE) -proliferation of RBCs in bone marrow -low or undetectable Epo concentration -often a diagnosis of exclusion |
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Term
What are the two types of secondary absolute erythrocytosis? |
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Definition
-appropriate vs inappropriate |
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Term
Describe appropriate secondary absolute erythrocytosis. What are some common causes? |
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Definition
-Epo production in response to hypoxia -secondary to dec tissue oxygenation" pulmonary disease, right-to-left CV shunts, high altitude |
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Term
What is inappropriate absolute erythrocytosis? Common causes? |
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Definition
-Epo production in absence of hypoxia -excessive Epo pdn/release: renal mass, other neoplasia, hyperadrenocorticism, hyperthyroidism |
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Term
What clinical signs are often attributable to absolute erythrocytosis? |
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Definition
-PCV > 60-70% -PU/PD -neuro changes: behavioral, seizures, ataxia, blindness -epistaxis, hyphema, retinal hemorrhages -bright red mucous membranes -may be normal!!! |
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Term
How do we go about diagnosing absolute erythrocytosis? |
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Definition
-Evaluate for underlying cause: rads, ultrasound, echo, arterial blood gass |
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Term
What is the goal of treatment of erythrocytosis? |
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Definition
-dec circulating RBC = dec blood viscosity |
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Term
How do we treat erythrocytosis? |
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Definition
-manage underlying disease -therapeutirc phlebotomy: admin equal vol of fluids -hydroxyura -possible medical leeches |
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