dyserythropoietic congenital anemia - definitie. Wat is dyserythropoietic congenital anemia
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Wat (wie) is dyserythropoietic congenital anemia - definitie

CONGENITAL HEMOLYTIC ANEMIA CHARACTERIZED BY THE PRODUCTION OF RED BLOOD CELLS WITH A SPHERE SHAPE, RATHER THAN THE NORMAL BICONCAVE DISK SHAPE
Congenital Spherocytosis; Spherocytosis, hereditary; Minkowski–Chauffard syndrome; Minkowski-Chauffard disease; Congenital spherocytic anemia; Congenital spherocytic hemolytic anemia; Minkowski-Chauffard syndrome; Hereditary spherocytosis 2, 3; Hereditary spherocytosis 1
  • Micrograph of a spherocyte (center).

Congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type IV         
MEDICAL CONDITION
CDA Type IV; Dyserythropoietic anemia, congenital type 4; Cda iv; Cda 4; Cda type 4; Congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type iv
Congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type IV (CDA IV) has been described with typical morphologic features of CDA II but a negative acidified-serum test.
Congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type I         
CONGENITAL DYSERYTHROPOIETIC ANEMIATYPE I (CDA I) IS A HEMATOLOGIC DISORDER OF ERYTHROPOIESIS CHARACTERIZED BY MODERATE TO SEVERE MACROCYTIC ANEMIA OCCASIONALLY ASSOCIATED WITH LIMB OR NAIL DEFORMITIES AND SCOLIOSIS
Dyserythropoietic anemia, congenital type 1; CDA Type I; Cda i; Cda 1; Cda type 1
Congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type I (CDA I) is a disorder of blood cell production, particularly of
Congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type II         
MEDICAL CONDITION
Dyserythropoietic anemia, congenital type 2; CDA Type II; Hempas; Cda ii; Cda 2; Cda type 2
Congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type II (CDA II), or hereditary erythroblastic multinuclearity with positive acidified serum lysis test (HEMPAS) is a rare genetic anemia in humans characterized by hereditary erythroblastic multinuclearity with positive acidified serum lysis test.

Wikipedia

Hereditary spherocytosis

Hereditary spherocytosis (HS) is a congenital hemolytic disorder, wherein a genetic mutation coding for a structural membrane protein phenotype leads to a spherical shaping of erythrocytic cellular morphology. As erythrocytes are sphere-shaped (spherocytosis), rather than the normal biconcave disk-shaped, their morphology interferes with these cells' abilities to be flexible during circulation throughout the entirety of the body - arteries, arterioles, capillaries, venules, veins, and organs. This difference in shape also makes the red blood cells more prone to rupture under osmotic and/or mechanical stress. Cells with these dysfunctional proteins are degraded in the spleen, which leads to a shortage of erythrocytes resulting in hemolytic anemia.

HS was first described in 1871, and is the most common cause of inherited hemolysis in populations of northern European descent, with an incidence of 1 in 5000 births. The clinical severity of HS varies from mild (symptom-free carrier), to moderate (anemic, jaundiced, and with splenomegaly), to severe (hemolytic crisis, in-utero hydrops fetalis), because HS is caused by genetic mutations in a multitude of structural membrane proteins and exhibits incomplete penetrance in its expression.

Early symptoms include anemia, jaundice, splenomegaly, and fatigue. Acute cases can threaten to cause hypoxia secondary to anemia and acute kernicterus through high blood levels of bilirubin, particularly in newborns. Most cases can be detected soon after birth. Testing for HS is available for the children of affected adults. Occasionally, the disease will go unnoticed until the child is about 4 or 5 years of age. A person may also be a carrier of the disease and show no signs or symptoms of the disease. Late complications may result in the development of pigmented gallstones, which is secondary to the detritus of the broken-down blood cells (unconjugated or indirect bilirubin) accumulating within the gallbladder. Also, patients who are heterozygous for a hemochromatosis gene may exhibit iron overload, despite the hemochromatosis genes being recessive. In chronic patients, an infection or other illness can cause an increase in the destruction of red blood cells, resulting in the appearance of acute symptoms, a hemolytic crisis. On a blood smear, Howell-Jolly bodies may be seen within red blood cells. Primary treatment for patients with symptomatic HS has been total splenectomy, which eliminates the hemolytic process, allowing normal hemoglobin, reticulocyte and bilirubin levels. The resultant asplenic patient is susceptible to encapsulated bacterial infection, and prevented with vaccination. If other symptoms, such as abdominal pain persist, the removal of the gallbladder may be warranted for symptomatic cholelithiasis.