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Case One Review

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... in patients who are deficient in iron and have coexistent diseases (hepatitis, ... Bone pain in which lytic lesions are discovered on routine skeletal films ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Case One Review


1
Case One - Review
2
What are rales? What does their presence
indicate?
  • Rales clicking, rattling, or crackling noises
    heard during inspiration.
  • Due to "popping open" of small airways and
    alveoli collapsed by fluid, exudate, or lack of
    aeration during expiration.
  • Suggests
  • Pneumonia,
  • Atelectasis,
  • Pulmonary fibrosis,
  • Acute bronchitis, or
  • Bronchiectasis.
  • Pulmonary edema secondary to left-sided
    congestive heart failure can also cause rales.
  • History and Physical Exam
  • A 60 y.o. ?
  • Chief complaint fever and productive cough for
    approximately two months
  • Fatigue and low back pain
  • Physical Exam
  • Alert ?, oriented
  • BP 120/90
  • HR 90 bpm RR 23
  • Temp. 102.2 oF
  • Bilateral rales
  • Rest of exam - unremarkable

3
Radiology
Normal Flat Plate
Patient On Admission
Bilateral infiltrates
4
CBC
  • Nucleated RBC (NRBCs) 5
  • Immature RBCs not normally seen in peripheral
    blood beyond neonatal period.
  • Appearance in peripheral blood of children
    and adults signifies bone marrow damage or stress
    and potentially serious underlying disease.
  • Disorders that disrupt bone marrow
    architecture (e.g. fibrosis, metastatic tumors),
    an increased rate of erythropoiesis (e.g.
    hemolytic anemia), and in megaloblastic and
    dyserythropoietic disorders.
  • Normocytic, normochromic anemia
  • MCV, MCH, MCHC all normal
  • Reticulocyte normal
  • Malignancy
  • Myeloma
  • Chronic Disease

5
Iron Deficiency Anemia Longstanding
  • Most common anemia
  • Low or depleted iron stores
  • Develops slowly months as iron stores are
    depleted ? microcytic - hypochromic anemia
  • In men and post-menopausal women often indicates
    GI tract bleeding
  • Monthly menstrual bleeding - in premenopausal
    women
  • Symptoms
  • Fatigue and diminished capability to perform hard
    labor
  • Lack of circulating hemoglobin however, out of
    proportion to the degree of anemia and probably
    are due to a depletion of proteins that require
    iron as a part of their structure
  • Proof
  • Bone Marrow smear
  • Microcytosis apparent in the smear long before
    the MCV is decreased
  • Platelets usually are increased in this disorder.
  • ?Serum iron,? total iron-binding capacity (TIBC),
    and ? serum ferritin
  • A low serum iron and ferritin with an elevated
    TIBC are diagnostic of iron deficiency.
  • While a low serum ferritin is virtually
    diagnostic of iron deficiency, a normal serum
    ferritin can be seen in patients who are
    deficient in iron and have coexistent diseases
    (hepatitis, anemia of chronic disorders).
  • ? serum Ferritin
  • liver damage,
  • inflammation
  • infection, or cancer
  • http//www.emedicine.com/med/fulltopic/topic1188.h
    tm

6
Given the bilateral infiltrate, what is the
significance of the increased numbers of bands?
  • Seen in
  • Acute infection
  • Metaboloc acidosis
  • Necrosis myocardial infarct. malignant tumors
  • Blood disease
  • hemolytic crises,
  • severe blood loss
  • chronic  granulocytic leukemia,
  • Likely an infectious process
  • WBC elevated
  • Band cells increased
  • Unilobed and two lobed nucleus predominate

7
CHEMISTRY
  • Significance of both CR and BUN being elevated by
    roughly the same amount?
  • Kidney problems
  • ??Ca
  • gt 98 - A parathyroid problem
  • lt 1 of cases due to cancer...
  • Multiple Myeloma
  • Lung (squamous cell CA - not all lung cancers)
  • Breast Cancer (advanced disease)
  • Kidney Cancer
  • Squamous Cell Cancer of the Head and Neck

8
BUN ELEVATED
  • Nearly all primary renal diseases increase BUN
  • Glomerulonephritis
  • Pyelonephritis
  • Acute tubular necrosis
  • Urinary obstruction
  • BUT THERE ARE OTHER IMPORTANT DISEASES THAT ALSO
    INCREASE BUN

9
BUN Blood Urea Nitrogen
  • Source breakdown of blood, muscle, and protein
  • Excreted Entirely by kidney
  • Level of BUN is a function of both synthesis and
    excretion
  • High
  • Renal disease
  • Urinary Tract Obstr.
  • Dehydration
  • CHF
  • GI bleeding
  • Starvation
  • Shock
  • Low
  • liver disease
  • malnutrition

10
CREATININE ELEVATED
  • Production of Cr depends only on muscle mass,
    rarely fluctuates
  • Entirely excreted by kidney
  • ONLY renal disorders will affect CR levels
  • BUNCr ratio 201
  • If BUN gtgtCr think PRE-RENAL dehydration,
    malnutrition, CHF, hepatic failure
  • If BUN CR are ?think RENAL

11
URIC ACID
  • Excreted primarily through the kidneys (75)
  • More than 90 of patients with elevated BUN and
    serum creatinine also have increased uric acid.
  • Associated with
  • Chronic renal disease
  • Acute renal failure
  • Severely decreased renal blood flow
  • Other conditions include drugs (diuretics
    particularly thiazides), ketoacidosis of diabetes
    or starvation, lactic acidosis, toxemia of
    pregnancy and hypothyroidism. Gout
  • Most common reason for an elevation in uric acid
    in hospitalized patients is prerenal azotemia.
  • Urea increases faster than creatinine
  • Size matters! Urea is small and readily
    reabsorbed by the tubules. So if it gets
    filtered is still can be reabsorbed

12
Electrolytes
13
Culture results
  • Gram positive cocci in pairs and chains
  • Consistent with Streptococcus pneumoniae

14
Two weeks later
  • Fever gone, chest clear
  • Back pain worse

15
HEMATOLOGY 2 weeks later
16
CHEMISTRY 2 Weeks later
17
Urinalysis
18
Proteinuria
  • Normally no protein in the urine.
  • Glomerulus prevents protein from spilling into
    the urine
  • Source of proteins albumin and globulin from
    plasma
  • Losses gt 2000mg/24 hours in adults (3 -
    dipstick) usually indicates a glomerular
    etiology.
  • Urine dipstick DOES NOT detect Bence Jones
    Protein of Multiple Myeloma ? 24 hr. urine

19
Multiple Myeloma
  • What is it Multiple myeloma - cancer of plasma
    cells
  • Expansion of a single line of plasma cells that
    replaces normal bone marrow and produce
    monoclonal immunoglobulins
  • Plasma cells develop from B lymphocytes ?produce
    antibodies that fight infection
  • Over years tumor erodes the inside of the bone,
    producing holes in the bones (called "lytic"
    lesions).
  • Since the malignant cells are clones they act
    exactly alike and produce the same antibody
    molecules ?
  • Diagnosis Suspected because of one or more of the
    following
  • Bone pain in which lytic lesions are discovered
    on routine skeletal films
  • An increased total serum protein concentration
    and/or the presence of a monoclonal protein in
    the urine or serum
  • Systemic signs or symptoms suggestive of
    malignancy, such as unexplained anemia
  • Hypercalcemia is either symptomatic or discovered
    incidentally. Nearly half of all people with
    myeloma have hypercalcemia at some stage in
    disease
  • Acute renal failure with a bland urinalysis or
    rarely the nephrotic syndrome due to concurrent
    primary amyloidosis
  • Diagnostic Criteria
  • Presence of an M-protein in serum and/or urine
  • Presence of clonal bone marrow plasma cells or
    plasmacytoma (discrete, solitary mass of
    neoplastic monoclonal plasma cells in either bone
    or soft tissue )
  • http//www.emedicine.com/med/topic1521.htm

20
Bence Jones Protein
  • First tumor marker 1848!
  • Small proteins (light chain immunoglobulin)
    present in urine in Multiple Myeloma and a few
    other diseases
  • Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia, some lymphomas
    and leukemias, osteogenic sarcoma,
    cryoglobulinemia, malignant B-cell disease,
    amyloidosis, light chain disease, and cancer that
    has spread to bone.
  • Made by plasma cells
  • 24 hr urine, heat to 140 ºF (preciptiates),
    further heating dissolves, cool -gt preciptitate

21
Renal Disorders in MM
  • Myeloma cells produce large numbers of proteins.
  • Fragmentation of some of these immunoglobulins
    produces a special protein (ie, Bence-Jones
    protein).
  • This protein, as well as others produced by the
    malignant plasma cells, MAY BE deposited in the
    kidney tubules.
  • The proteinemia in myeloma often exceeds the
    resorptive ability of the kidney, resulting in
    proteinuria
  • ? spillage of Bence-Jones protein.
  • Amyloidosis is a frequent finding (8-15) in
    patients with myeloma and further contributes to
    parenchymal dysfunction.
  • Calculi are often found because of elevated uric
    acid and calcium levels.
  • All of these factors can eventually result in
    renal failure and death.

22
Peripheral Blood Smear
Patient
Normal
Rouleaux formation correlates with an increased
concentration of serum monoclonal proteins.
Rouleaux may be seen as an artifact in the
thicker portions of blood smears.
Normochromic,normocytic anemia
Rouleaux
23
Skull x-rays
  • Randomly distributed, rounded, punched out lytic
    lesions throughout the skull. Multiple myeloma
    could also resemble metastatic breast carcinoma.
    Treated breast carcinoma, however, often appears
    sclerotic rather than lytic.

24
Staging Multiple Myeloma
25
Serum Protein Electrophoresis
  • Note sharp peak in the gamma region indicative of
    a monoclonal protein

26
Risk Factors for Multiple Myeloma
  • Age and Gender
  • 1 are diagnosed in people lt40
  • 2/3 are diagnosed in people gt65
  • Men are 50 more likely to develop MM than woman
  • Race
  • 2X as common among black Americans as white
    Americans.
  • Occupational Exposure
  • Petroleum-related industries MAY be at higher
    risk
  • Obesity
  • Other Plasma Cell Diseases
  • Many with MGUS or solitary plasmacytoma will
    eventually develop MM
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