I have previously blogged about DVT and PE here. The article the discussant mentioned is available here
I wanted to focus on the approach to polycythemia in more detail (review article here):
Definition: Hemoglobin greater than 165 in women (hematocrit 48%) or 185 in men (hematocrit 52%).
Relative polycythemia, related to volume contraction, needs to be differentiated from absolute polycythemia in which there is an increased red cell mass.
Primary
- Polycythemia vera
- High oxygen affinity hemoglobins
- Epo receptor activating mutations
- Other
Secondary
- Chronic hypoxemia from:
- Cyanotic heart disease
- Right to left shunts (i.e. AVMs in HHT, other)
- Chronic hypoxemic lung disease
- Obstructive sleep apnea
- Pickwickian syndrome (obesity hypoventillation)
- Living at altitude
- Chronic carbon monoxide poisoning! (Including smoker's polycythemia)
- EPO overproduction (think highly vascular tumors):
- Renal cell carcinoma
- HCC
- Uterine cancer
- Hemangioblastoma
Treatment of PRV:
- ASA to prevent ischemic events
- Phlebotomy to hematocrit less than 45% in men and 42% in women
- Failing phlebotomy add hydroxyurea
- Add allopurinol in patients with symptomatic hyperuricemia or very high uric acid excretion (greater than 1100mg/day)
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