0521779407-09 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:12
Hereditary Elliptocytosis (HE) 697
■family history of anemia, jaundice, gallstones, splenectomy
■HE: dominant inheritance; Hemolytic HE and HPP: recessive inher-
itance
■common in people of African and Mediterranean ancestry
Signs & Symptoms
■most HE patients are asymptomatic
■most hemolytic HE and HPP patients have well-compensated ane-
mia
■hemolysis and anemia are exaggerated in infancy
■diagnosed incidentally during testing for unrelated conditions
■splenomegaly, jaundice, pallor in hemolytic HE and HPP
tests
Laboratory
■HE: Peripheral blood smear with normocytic, normochromic ellip-
tocytes, few to 100%
■HPP: elliptocytes, bizarre-shaped cells with fragmentation or bud-
ding, poikilocytes, pyknocytes, microspherocytes
■elliptocytes rare on blood smear before 6 months of age
■anemia - mild or none in HE, mild to moderate in hemolytic HE and
HPP
■decreased MCV (50-70 fl) in HPP
■markers of hemolysis - increased reticulocyte count, serum bilirubin,
urinary urobilinogen, lactate dehydrogenase and decreased hap-
toglobin if significant hemolysis
■negative antiglobulin (Coombs’) test
■increased incubated osmotic fragility in HPP (not HE)
Imaging
■splenomegaly on abdominal ultrasound or radionuclide scanning
■cholelithiasis on abdominal ultrasound
differential diagnosis
■elliptocytes seen in megaloblastic anemias, hypochromic micro-
cytic anemias (including iron deficiency anemia and thalassemia),
myelodysplastic syndromes, and myelodysplasia
management
What to Do First
■assess degree of anemia, hemolysis, and potential complications
■therapy rarely needed in HE
■RBC transfusion if symptomatic anemia