Alcohol induced burr cell (echinocytic) haemolytic anaemia and haemochromatosis

2008 
Summary A 51-year-old man with chronic alcoholic liver disease developed a severe haemolytic anaemia characterized by the presence of circulating burrshaped cells (echinocytes). Several transfusions of packed red cells were ineffective in raising the haemoglobin concentration, showing that the abnormality was acquired by the transfused cells. Liver biopsies revealed haemochromatosis. Haematological parameters normalized four months after the patient stopped drinking alcohol, but burr cells were still present and erythrocyte life-span was still markedly shortened at one year follow-up. Since serum cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, and Apo-Al and Apo-B lipoproteins were considerably decreased, the lipid composition of the red cell membrane was studied. Findings showed that echinocytosis occurred with no change in membrane cholesterol content, nor in cholesterol: phospholipid ratio, but with an alteration in the phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylinositol concentrations. While haemochromatosis was most likely the cause of the erythrocyte anomaly, alcohol intake was probably responsible for the acute onset of haemolytic anaemia with effects directly on the erythrocyte membrane as well as mediated by the progressive hepatic injury, with alterations in the plasma and successively in the intramembrane lipid composition.
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