Topic Highlight
Copyright ©2009 The WJG Press and Baishideng.
World J Gastroenterol. Oct 7, 2009; 15(37): 4627-4637
Published online Oct 7, 2009. doi: 10.3748/wjg.15.4627
Table 1 Etiopathogenic classification of anemia
Regenerative anemia
Acute or chronic bleeding
Hemolytic anemia
Hereditary (hemoglobinopathy, enzymopathy, membrane-cytoskeletal defects)
Acquired (autoimmune, mechanical destruction, toxic-metabolic, drugs, infectious, PNH, hypersplenism)
Hypo-regenerative anemia
Bone marrow failure caused by stem cell pathology
Quantitative disorder
Selective: erythroblastopenia (pure red cell aplasia)
Global: aplastic anemia
Qualitative disorder (dysmyelopoiesis)
Inherited: hereditary dyserythropoiesis
Acquired: myelodysplasia
Bone marrow infiltration
Leukemia, lymphoma, multiple myeloma
Solid tumors
Myelofibrosis
Thesaurismosis (Gaucher disease)
Inflammatory chronic diseases, microorganisms (Histoplasma, HIV)
Drugs, hypothyroidism, uremia
Erythropoietic factors deficiency
Iron
IDA
ACD
Cobalamin and folate
Megaloblastic anemia
Hormones: erythropoietin, thyroid hormones, androgens, steroids
Table 2 Morphological classification
Microcytic anemia (MCV < 82 fL)
IDA
Thalassemia
Non thalassemic conditions associated with microcytosis
ACD (e.g. rheumatoid arthritis, Hodgkin’s lymphoma, chronic infection, neoplasia)
Sideroblastic anemia (e.g. hereditary, lead poisoning)
Normocytic anemia (MCV = 82-98 fL)
Nutritional anemia (iron deficiency, cobalamin y/o folate)
Anemia of renal insufficiency
Hemolytic anemia
Red cell intrinsic causes: membranopathy, enzymopathy, hemoglobinopathy
Red cell extrinsic causes: immune-mediated, microangiopathic, associated with infection, chemical agent (spider venoms), metabolic
ACD
Primary bone marrow disorder
Causes that are intrinsic to hematopoietic stem cells: bone marrow aplasia (idiopathic, PNH, Fanconi syndrome), pure red cell aplasia (acquired, congenital, Diamond-Blackfan syndrome), myelodysplastic syndrome
Extrinsic causes: drugs, toxins, radiation, viruses, immune-mediated, bone marrow infiltration (metastatic and lymphoma)
Macrocytic anemia (MCV > 98 fL)
Drugs (hydroxyurea, zidovudine, methotrexate)
Nutritional (vitamin B12 and folate deficiency)
Drug-induced hemolytic anemia
Dyserythropoiesis, myelodysplastic syndrome, clonal hematologic disorder
Hereditary hematologic disorders
Mild macrocytosis (MCV = 100-110 fL)
Reticulocytes
Excess alcohol intake, liver disease, smoking
Hypothyroidism, Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia
Copper deficiency, bone marrow aplasia, erythroblastopenic anemia
Down syndrome
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Table 3 Classification of anemia as RDW and MCV
↓MCVNormal MCV↑MCV
Normal RDWβ-thalassemiaNormocyticBone marrow aplasia
α-thalassemia
Increased RDWIron deficiencyInflammatory anemia HypothyroidismMegaloblastic anemia
Table 4 Serum levels that differentiate ACD, IDA and mixed anemia
ACDIDAMixed anemia
Iron
Transferrin↓ or N
Transferrin saturation
FerritinN or ↑↓ or N
Serum transferrin receptorNN or ↑
Ratio: soluble receptor of transferrin/log ferritin< 1> 2> 2
Cytokine levelsN
Table 5 Causes of megaloblastic anemia
Cobalamin deficiency
Poor diet
Deficiency of intrinsic factor
Pernicious anemia
Total or partial Gastrectomy
Ingestion of caustic (lye)
Functional defect of intrinsic factor
Alteration of ileal (microenvironment)
Insufficient pancreatic protease activity
Inactivation enzyme (Sd. Zollinger-Ellison)
Competition for cobalamin
Alteration of ileal mucosa
Acquired
Surgical resection or by-pass
Regional enteritis (Crohn’s disease)
Tropical esprue
Celiac disease, Tuberculosis
Lymphomatous infiltration
Induced by drugs
Congenital
Sd Immerslund-Gräsbeck
Congenital transcobalamin II deficiency or abnormality
Congenital methylmalonic acidemia and aciduria
Hemodialysis
Urinary losses (congestive heart failure)
Folate deficiency
Dietary
Old age, infancy, poverty, alcoholism, chronic invalids, psychiatrically disturbed, scurvy and kwashiorkor
Excess utilization or loss
Physiologic: pregnancy and lactation, prematurity
Pathologic: Hematologic diseases
Malignant diseases
Inflammatory disease
Metabolic disease
Excess urinary loss, congestive heart failure, active liver disease
Hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis
Malabsorption
Congenital
Anti-folate drugs
Alcoholism
Tropical sprue, gluten-induced enteropathy
Extensive jejune resection, Crohn’s disease, partial gastrectomy, systemic bacterial infection, Whipple’s disease
Congenital abnormalities of folate metabolism
Cyclohydrolase, methionine synthetase
Combined deficit of folate and cobalamin
Celiac disease
Regional enteritis (Crohn’s disease)
Congenital disorder of DNA synthesis
Disorders of DNA synthesis induced by drugs
Anti-folate
Purine antagonists
Pyrimidine antagonists
Alkylating
Eritroleucemia
Table 6 Differential diagnosis of anemia from a gastrointestinal point of view
Gastrointestinal causes of anemia
Microcytic anemia
Iron deficiency
Decreased iron absorption
Frequent: Celiac disease, gastrectomy, H pylori colonization
Infrequent: Bowel resection, bacterial overgrowth
Occult gastrointestinal blood loss
Frequent: aspirin and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug use, colonic carcinoma, gastric ulceration, angiodysplasia, inflammatory bowel diseases
Infrequent: esophagitis, esophageal carcinoma, gastric antral vascular carcinoma, small bowel tumors, ampullary carcinoma, Ancylomasta duodenale
Non-gastrointestinal blood loss
Frequent: menstruation, blood donation, ACD
Infrequent: Hematuria, epistaxis
Sideroblastic anemia (alcohol, lead, drugs), vitamin B6
ACD
Normocytic anemia
Frequent: ACD (liver disease, renal insufficiency, malignancy, nutritional deficiency, drug effects, alcoholism, recent trauma or surgery, iron deficiency
Infrequent: primary bone marrow disorder
Macrocytic anemia
Non-megaloblastic
Systemic disease:
Frequent: liver disease, alcoholism
Infrequent: primary bone marrow disease (myelodysplastic syndrome, aplastic anemia), metastatic infiltration, hemolytic anemia, hypothyroidism
Megaloblastic anemia
Vitamin B12 deficiency: pernicious anemia, gastrectomy, hereditary deficiency of intrinsic factor, inflammatory bowel disease, primary intestinal malabsorptive disorders, parasitic colonization, nutritional deficiencies
Folate deficiency: diet poor in folates, regional enteritis, Whipple’s disease, scleroderma, amyloidosis, increase requirements (liver disease, hemolytic anemia)
Antifolate drugs: methotrexate