AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic alcoholism can lead to several types of anemia, particularly megaloblastic anemia and sideroblastic anemia.
  • A study of 71 chronic alcoholics showed a high prevalence of anemia (about 95.77%), with varying red blood cell morphology and significant findings like erythroid hyperplasia in bone marrow.
  • The presence of ring sideroblasts and abnormal iron levels in some patients indicates the complexity of diagnosing anemia in alcoholics, suggesting that a history of alcohol use is crucial for accurate assessment and treatment.

Article Abstract

Anemia associated with alcoholism has numerous causes, most common being megaloblastic anemia and acquired sideroblastic anemia (SA). The bone marrow aspirate (BMA) and bone marrow iron (BMIr) findings and their correlation with peripheral blood smear (PBS) have not been extensively described in literature. We aim to study the spectrum of hematological abnormalities in chronic alcoholics. Complete blood count (CBC), PBS, BMA and BMIr of 71 chronic alcoholics were studied retrospectively over a period of 3 years. The slides were reviewed by 2 pathologists. The clinical history, CBC, PBS, BMA and BMIr findings were recorded. Out of 71 patients, 68 (95.77%) had anaemia. Red cell morphology varied from normocytic-normochromic, microcytic-hypochromic, macrocytic, to dimorphic anaemia. Principal findings seen on BMA were erythroid hyperplasia and megaloblastic maturation. BMIr was available in 41 patients; iron stores were decreased in 2 (4.88%), normal in 14 (34.15%), increased in 25 (60.97%). Seven (17.07%) cases showed presence of ring sideroblasts. Chronic alcoholics show a variety of abnormalities in BMA, which closely mimic many haematological disorders. A history of alcoholism should always be taken in these circumstances. SA should be ruled out in all chronic alcoholics with anaemia not responding to vitamin B/folic acid, even with macrocytic picture on PBS.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7326746PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12288-019-01188-5DOI Listing

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