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Interferences with Diffusion. Anemia Leukemia Hemophilia. Interferences with Diffusion. Describe clinical manifestations, causes, therapeutic interventions, & nursing management of patients with the following Hematologic Problems: Anemias – Decreased Erthrocyte Production
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Interferences with Diffusion Anemia Leukemia Hemophilia
Interferences with Diffusion • Describe clinical manifestations, causes, therapeutic interventions, & nursing management of patients with the following Hematologic Problems: • Anemias – • Decreased Erthrocyte Production • Iron Deficiency Anemia; Thalassemia; • Megaloblastic Anemias: Cobalamin deficiency, Folic Acid Deficiency; Aplastic Anemia • Anemia Caused by Blood Loss • Anemia Caused by Erythrocyte Destruction • Sickle Cell Disease • Acquired Hemolytic Anemia • Hemochromatosis • Polycythemia • Problems of Hemostasis: • Thrombocytopenia • Hemophilia and Von Willebrand’s Disease • Leukemias – • Acute myelogenous leukemia • Acute lymphocytic leukemia • Chronic myelogenous leukemia • Chronic lymphocytic leukemia • Lymphomas • Hodgkin’s Disease/ non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas • Multiple Myeloma
Interferences with DiffusionHematologic System Review • Complete Blood Count Studies • Hgb • Hct • Total RBC Count • Red Cell Indices • MCV – mean corpuscular volume (size of RBC) • MCH – mean corpuscular hemoglobin (weight of Hb/RBC) • MCHC – mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (saturation of RBC with Hb) • WBC • WBC Differential • Platelet Count • Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR or Sed Rate)
Interferences with DiffusionAnemias Caused by Decreased Erythrocyte Production Anemia • Deficiency in the number of erythrocytes (RBCs) • The quantity of hemoglobin • Volume of packed RBCs (hematocrit) • Clinical Manifestations: caused by the body’s response to hypoxia • Mild (Hb 10 -14) no symptoms or minor changes • Moderate – (Hg 6 – 10) CV Changes: palpitations, dyspnea, diaphoresis • Severe – (Hg<6) multiple body system CV, Cerebral, Major Organs
Interferences with DiffusionAnemias Caused by Decreased Erythrocyte Production Iron-Deficiency Anemia • Common hematologic disorder • Etiology: Inadequate dietary intake, malabsorption, blood loss, or hemolysis • Clinical Manifestations: • Pallor • Glossitis – inflammation of the tongue • Cheilitis – inflammation of the lips • Headache, paresthesia, burning sensation of the tongue • Diagnostic Studies: Lab Studies Endoscopy to identify GI bleed • Treatment: Drug Therapy – oral Iron replacement • Iron absorbed best in duodenum • Ferrous sulfate – take about one hour prior to meal • Gastric side effects: nausea / constipation • Nursing Management – Diet & Medication Instruction
Interferences with DiffusionAnemias Caused by Decreased Erythrocyte Production Thalassemia • Autosomal recessive genetic disorder of inadequate production of normal hemoglobin • Hemolysis occurs • Abnormal Hb synthesis • Ethnic groups of Mediterranean Sea & near equatorial regions of Asia and Africa • Clinical Manifestation: mild – moderate anemia with hypochromia (pale cells) or microcytosis (small cells) • Minor: one thalassemic gene – mild • Major: two thalassemic genes – severe – physical & mental growth retarded - cardiac failure is fatal • Medical Management: • Medication: Chelation Therapy IV deferoxamine (Desferal) – iron binding agent to reduce iron overload • Transfusions to maintain Hg >10g/dl • Nursing Management: Supportive
Interferences with Diffusion Anemias Caused by Decreased Erythrocyte Production Megaloblastic Anemias Caused by impaired DNA synthesis & characterized by the presence of large RBCs Cobalamin Deficiency (Vitamin B12)– • Intrinsic factor (IF) is secreted by the parietal cells of the gastric mucosa • Cobalamin is not absorbed if IF is not present • Causes: Pernicious anemia, nutritional deficiency; heredity enzyme defect • Clinical Manifestations: GI—sore tongue, anorexia, N&V, abdominal pain; muscle weakness, paresthesias of feet and hands; confusion • Diagnostic Testing: Serum cobalamin levels; gastroscopy; Schilling Test – assesses parietal cell function • Medical Management: Parenteral administration of cobalamin – daily for 2 weeks, then weekly until >HCT, then monthly for life; intranasal form • Nursing Management: Health Promotion; protection from sensory injury—burns, trauma; pt compliance with replacement therapy
Interferences with Diffusion Anemias Caused by Decreased Erythrocyte Production Megaloblastic Anemias Folic Acid Deficiency – Folic Acid is required for DNA synthesis leading to RBC formation & maturation • Causes: Poor nutrition green leafy vegetables, citrus fruits, & beans, nuts, grains; malabsorption syndromes; drugs that impede absorption (Dilantin); Alcohol abuse; anorexia; hemodialysis patients • Clinical Manifestations: similar to cobalamin deficiency – dyspepsia, smooth, beefy red tongue; absence of neurologic problems • Diagnostic Testing: < Folate Level (norm: 3-25mg/ml) • Medical Management: Replacement Therapy Folic Acid 1mg/day • Nursing Management: Medication & dietary compliance
Interferences with Diffusion Anemias Caused by Decreased Erythrocyte Production Anemia of Chronic Disease • Associated with underproduction of RBCs and decreased RBC survival • Causes: Renal failure; advanced liver cirrhosis; chronic inflammation; malignancy; immunosuppression • Medical Management: • Correct underlying disorder • Erythropoietin Therapy – Epogen, Procrit • Nursing Management: Care of the debilitated patient – dietary & medication compliance
Interferences with Diffusion Anemias Caused by Decreased Erythrocyte Production Aplastic Anemia • Pancytopenia – decrease of all blood cell types --- RBCs, WBCs, platelets & hypocellular bone marrow • Congenital • Acquired – exposure to radiation & chemicals, post viral & bacterial infections • Idiopathic – 70% • Medical Management: • Immunosuppressive therapy • Bone Marrow Transplantation
Interferences with Diffusion Anemia Caused by Blood Loss • Acute Blood Loss • Hemorrhage • Decreased oxygen-carrying capacity • Chronic Blood Loss • Body maintains its blood volume by slowly increasing plasma volume < RBCs • Clinical Manifestations: • Range from fatigue with melena to orthostatic BP changes to shock • Medical Management: • Treat underlying cause – • Blood replacement – packed RBCs • Supplemental Iron
PAIR-SHARE Name one thing you learned thus far
Interferences with Diffusion Anemia Caused by Increased Erythrocyte Destruction Sickle Cell Disease • Group of inherited autosomal recessive disorders characterized by the presence of abnormal Hgb in the erythrocyte • Causes the erythrocyte to stiffen & elongate • Sickle shape in response to lack of oxygen • Occurrence: 50,000 Americans • 1 in 350-500 African Americans; Mediterranean, So Am; East Indian, Arabian ancestry • Types: • Sickle Cell Anemia: most severe – inherited homozygous for hemoglobin S (HbSS) from both parents • Sickle Cell Trait: mild - inherited from one parent + one normal
Interferences with Diffusion Anemia Caused by Increased Erythrocyte Destruction Sickle Cell Disease • Sickling Episodes: • Hypoxemia – triggered by stress, surgery, blood loss, viral or bacterial infection*(most common), dehydration, acidosis • Low oxygen tension in the blood • Sickled cells cannot easily pass through capillaries • Hemolyzed in the spleen • Initially reversible – then becomes irreversible due to chronic sickling
Interferences with Diffusion Anemia Caused by Increased Erythrocyte Destruction Sickle Cell Crisis • Severe, painful, acute exacerbation of RBC sickling causing a vasoocclusive crisis • Impaired blood flow, vasospasm, severe capillary hypoxia • RBC Cell membrane permeability changes – plasma loss, & thrombi; tissue ischemia & infarction • Sudden & persists for days • Clinical Manifestation: PAIN – tissue ischemia • Aching joints—hands & feet • Organs that have a high need for oxygen are most affected: heart, lungs, eyes, kidneys, brain • Spleen scarring & small – auto splenectomy • Bones – osteoporosis • Chronic leg ulcers • Prone to infection – pneumococcal pneumonia • Medical Management: Hospitalization--Oxygen, rest, fluids & electrolytes, treat infection, transfusion therapy, Chelation therapy, pain management • Bone Marrow Transplant & Gene therapy technology
PAIR-SHARE Priority Nursing Actions for the client in Sickle Cell Crisis
Interferences with Diffusion Anemia Caused by Increased Erythrocyte Destruction Acquired Hemolytic Anemia • Extrinsic causes of hemolysis: • Physical – trauma – renal dialysis; CP bypass • Autoimmune Reactions – medications; systemic lupus erythematosus; leukemia; lymphoma • Infectious agents and toxins – parasites; antigen-antibody reactions; splenomegaly • Medical Management: • Corticosteroids; Blood product administration; splenectomy
Interferences with Diffusion Anemia Caused by Increased Erythrocyte Destruction Polycythemia • Production o& presence of increased number of RBCs • Increased blood viscosity – hyperviscosity • Increased circulating volume – hypervolemia • Types: • Primary – polycythemia vera / chromosomal mutation – insidious -- >50 years of age • Secondary – chronic hypoxia stimulates erythropoietin production in the kidney > erythrocyte production • High altitude, COPD, CV disease • Diagnosis: Elevated RBC, WBC, Platelets; bone marrow aspiration – hypercellularity of RBCs; splenomegaly • Medical Management: • Phlebotomy to maintain HCT 45-48% • 300-500 ml removed every other day until <HCT • Hydration • Myelosuppressive therapy: busulfan (Myleran); hydroxyurea (Hydrea) = inhibits bone marrow production • Gout – Allopurinol • Antiplatelet medication: Persantine, Plavix, ASA – prevent thrombotic complicatins
Interferences with Diffusion Problems of Hemostasis Thrombocytopenia • Reduction of platelets below 150,000/ul • ITP: Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura: autoimmune • platelets are coated with antibodies; destroyed in spleen • Women 20-40 years • Normal survival 8-10 days; ITP: 1-3 days • TTP: Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura • Uncommon syndrome; adults 20-50 years • Characterized by hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, neurologic abnormalities, fever, renal abnormalities • HITT: Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia & Thrombosis Syndrome • Immune-mediated response to Heparin • Triggers platelet aggregation • Decreased platelets & increased thrombosis
Interferences with Diffusion Problems of Hemostasis Thrombocytopenia • Clinical Manifestations: • Bleeding: • Mucosal — epistaxis, gingival, large bullous hemorrhages on buccal mucosa • Skin -- superficial ecchymoses; petechiae — flat pin-pointed red brown microhemorrhages; purpura — numerous petechiae resulting reddish skin bruising • Prolonged bleeding – after injections & venipuncture • Internal bleeding – hemorrhage – any major organ -- orthostatic hypotension -- Cerebral hemorrhage fatal • Medical Management: • ITP: Corticosteroid; immunosuppressive therapy; splenectomy; platelet transfusion • TTP: Corticosteroids; plasma exchange; plasmapheresis; splenectomy • HITT: Discontinue Heparin – Protamine Sulfate
Interferences with Diffusion Anemia caused by Blood Loss or Erythrocyte Destruction Nursing Management • Assess: Assess oral cavity, skin, nasal cavity, urine, stool – occult and overt bleeding; Lab values—CBC, platelet count; vital signs; signs & symptoms for each blood dyscrasia • Nsg Action: Ice, packing, direct pressure to control bleeding; administer medications; No ASA or platelet-acting meds; oral hygiene, skin care, IV carefully—blood product transfusion care; Avoid IM/SQ meds; pad rails & firm surfaces; pain management as needed; post splenectomy care; • Pt Education: Interpret lab values; Rationale for no sharps – electric razor; disease process; medications; avoid valsalva; blow nose gently—one side at a time; signs & symptoms of bleeding; lab values; health promotion—rest, oxygenation, nutrition; pain management
Interferences with Diffusion Problems of Hemostasis Hemophilia Sex-linked recessive genetic disorder caused by defective or deficient coagulation
Interferences with Diffusion Problems of Hemostasis Hemophilia – Disease of Childhood • Clinical Manifestations: • Slow, persistent, prolonged bleeding from minor trauma and small cuts • Delayed bleeding after minor injuries • Uncontrollable hemorrhage after dental extractions • Epistaxis, especially after a blow to the face • GI bleed – ulcers & gastritis • Hematuria from GU trauma • Splenic rupture from abdominal trauma • Ecchymosis & subcutaneous hematomas • Neurologic signs – pain, anesthesia, & paralysis – from nerve compression caused by hematoma formation • Hemarthrosis – bleeding into joints – joint deformity – may cause crippling SYMPTOMS OFTEN LEAD TO THE DIAGNOSIS
Interferences with Diffusion Problems of Hemostasis Hemophilia Time Life Expectancy • Early 1900’s 11 years • 1970’s 60 years • 1980’s late 40’s • 90% of older people are HIV+ • Many are Hepatitis C+ • Improved blood product testing & screening has decreased the number of younger people with blood borne sequellae
Clotting Cascade • XII + Surface: intrinsic path: heparin/ PT | XIIa | VIIa + TF: extrinsic path: (warfarin/PT) XI---XIa <----/ | IX-----IXa | VIIIa | | Thrombomodulin X----------Xa --------> Prot. C/S -- / | Va | / | | Antithrombin III -----> II-------IIa ----------------------> VIIIa & Va | | Fibrinogen----Fibrin
Specific Clotting Factors fibrinogen (factor I); - prothrombin (factor II) - converts finbrinogen to fibrin - activates V, VIII & XIII (when bound to thrombomodulin) ; - activates protein C; - Vit K dependent; - factor V: when activated, serves as enzyme co-factor - factor Xa: part of Xa/Va complex which activates prothrombin; - factor VII: - part of factor VII/tissue factor complex-activates factor X & IX; - is activated by Xa; - Vit K dependen - factor VIII: serves as enzyme cofactor to help activate factor X; - factor IX: - acts w/ IXa/VIIIa/phos complex that activates factor X; - Vit K dependent; - factor X: - acts as Xa/Va phos complex that actives prothrombin; - Vit K dependent; - factor XII: - protein C: - when activated to Ca by thrombin bound to thrombomodulin, inhibits by proteolysis factors VIIIa and Va in reactions requiring prot S and phospholipids as cofactors; Vit K dependent; - antithrombin III: - is a plasma protease inhibitor that serves as a protease scavenger; - any of the blood-clotting enzymes that move away from the growing clot rapidly form a complex, and their activities are neutralized - formation of complexes is accelerated by heparin, forms of which are located in the microvasculature on the surfaces of endothelial cells; - inhibitor of the enzymes thrombin, Xa, IXa; Is activated by heparin;
Interferences with Diffusion Problems of Hemostasis Hemophilia • Diagnostic Studies: • Partial thromboplastin time: prolonged • Bleeding time: • Prolonged in von Willebrand’s because of structural defectiveplatelets; • Normal in Hemophilia A & B • Factor Assays: • Factor VIII – A • Factor IX – B • vWF – von Willebrand
Interferences with Diffusion Problems of Hemostasis Hemophilia • Medical Management Goals: • Preventive Care • Replacement Therapy during acute bleeding • May also be given prior to surgery or dental care • Factor VIII: Examples: Alpohanate, Bicolate, Koate • Factor IX: Examples: Alphanine, Benefix, Konyne • Mild Hemophilia A & von Willebrand’s: • Desmospressin acetate (DDAVP) – causes a release of vWF, which binds with factor VIII, increasing concentration • Short-lived; IV/SQ/Intranasal • Treatment of complications
Interferences with Diffusion Problems of Hemostasis Hemophilia • Nursing Management: • Health Promotion: • Acute Intervention: • Stop the topical bleeding – direct pressure, ice, Gelfoam or fibrin foam packing; topical hemostatic agents – thrombin • Administer the specific anticoagulant factor • Joint bleeding: rest; pack in ice; analgesia • Mobilization when bleeding subsides – P & AROM exercise • Manage life-threatening complications: • Airway management – Head and neck injuries • Neuro signs – Head trauma; spine trauma • Home Care: • Patient Education – Age-specific: how to live with illness: increased oral hygiene; injury prevention; Medic Alert; routine medical follow-up; non-contact sports; self-administration of replacement factors • Local chapters of National Hemophilia Society • Daily oral hygiene
PAIR-SHARE What coagulation studies are affected by hemophilia?
Interferences with DiffusionTransfusion Therapy - Indications • Packed red blood cells – anemia; Hgb < 6-9g/dL depending on symptoms • Washed red blood cells – hx allergic rx; bone marrow transplant patients • Platelets – thrombocytopenia; active bleeding with platelet count <80,000 • Fresh frozen plasma – deficiency in plasma coagulation factors • Cryoprecipitate – Hemophilia VII or von Willebrand’s disease • WBC’s – Sepsis, neutropenic infection
Interferences with DiffusionTransfusion Therapy • Responsibilities • Before Transfusion: assess lab values; verify order; assess pt’s VS, UO, hx of transfusion reactions; CONSENT; patent venous access; pt ID / Blood verification RN-RN - document. • During Transfusion: Appropriate tubing & filter; normal saline infusion; prescribed rate of administration; Remain with pt for the first 20 mins of transfusion; monitor VS and assess for transfusion rx. – document • After transfusion: Assess VS; discontinue infusion & dispose of bag & tubing according to policy; document; reassess blood work
Interferences with DiffusionTransfusion Therapy • Transfusion reactions • Hemolytic: blood type or Rh incompatibility – antigen-antibody reaction – fever, chills, DIC, circulatory collapse (back pain, tachypnea, tachycardiac, hypotension, chest pain, hemoglobinuria, apprehension • Allergic: Urticaria, bronchospasm, anaphylaxis – hx of allergy • Febrile: occurs in pts with anti-WBC antibodies – chills, tachycardiaa, fevere, hypotension, tachypnea • Bacterial: Rapid onset: occurs as a result of contamination – tachycardia; hypotension, fever, chills, shock • Circulatory Overload: Infused too quickly; Hx CHF – Hypertension, bounding pulse, distended jugular veins, dyspnea, restlessness, confusion