Hemolytic anemia differential diagnosis
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Shyam Patel [2]
Overview
Differentiating Hemolytic anemia from other Diseases
Characteristic/Parameter | Hemolytic anemia | Sideroblastic anemia | Anemia of chronic disease | Thalassemia | Iron-deficiency anemia | Erythropoietin deficiency | Vitamin B12 or folate deficiency |
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Etiology | Drug-induced, immune-mediated, non-immune-mediated, infections, rheumatologic disease | Alcoholism, lead poisoning, vitamin B6 deficiency, isoniazid, chloramphenicol | Chronic kidney disease, rheumatologic disease, cancer, HIV, chronic infection; excess release of IL-1 and IL-6 | Genetic defect with alpha- or beta-globin production | Petechiae, bleeding, other autoimmune diseases | Petechiae, purpura, ecchymoses | Bleeding, photosensitivity, arthritis, malar rash, discoid rash, renal failure, seizures, psychosis |
Mean corpuscular volume | Normocytic (80-100 femtoliter) | Microcytic (<80 femtoliter) or normocytic (80-100 femtoliter) | Normocytic (80-100 femtoliter) | Microcytic (<80 femtoliter) | Low; can be as low as 10000 per microliter | Low; can be less than 10000 per microliter; sudden onset after transfusion | Variable; usually low |
Laboratory abnormalities | Indirect hyperbilirubinemia, reticulocytosis, low haptoglobin, elevated LDH | Ringed sideroblasts in bone marrow; low vitamin B6 level, high lead level | Elevated ESR and CRP, elevated hepcidin, low serum iron, low transferrin, elevated ferritin | Abnormal hemoglobin electrophoresis (in beta-thalassemia) | Normal | Normal | Usually normal |
Physical exam | Pallor, jaundice | Pallor, weakness | Pallor, weakness | Irritability, growth retardation, jaundice, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly | Idiopathic; can be secondary to chronic lymphocytic leukemia, HIV, viral hepatitis, H. pylori | Exposure to transfused products | Autoimmunity with development of antibodies to DNA |
Treatment | Removal of offending agent, steroids, alternative immunosuppression | Removal of offending medication, high-dose vitamin B6 (up to 200mg daily), avoidance of splenectomy, symptomatic transfusion support with iron chelation as needed | Treatment of the underlying cause; erythropoiesis-stimulating agents, supportive red blood cell transfusions | Transfusion support, iron chelation, gene therapy if available | Yes | No; transfusion-related | Possible; drug-induced lupus can be caused by medications like hydralazine or isoniazid |
Other associated abnormalities | HELLP syndrome, TTP, CLL | Myelodysplastic syndrome, myeloproliferative neoplasm, iron overload | Inflammatory bowel disease | Extramedullary hematopoiesis | Yes; spontaneous bleeding if platelet count < 10000 per microliter | Yes; spontaneous bleeding if platelet count < 10000 per microliter | Rare |