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Haematinics
1. Haematinics
Dr. D. K. Brahma
Associate Professor
Department of Pharmacology
NEIGRIHMS, Shillong
2. Background
• These are the substances required in the formation of
blood, and are used in the treatment of anaemias
• Anaemia: a condition in which there is a deficiency of
red cells or of haemoglobin in the blood, resulting in
pallor and weariness
• Balance between production and destruction of RBCs
are disturbed:
– Blood Loss (acute or chronic)
– Impaired cell formation due to
• Deficiency of essential factors – Iron, Vit. B12 and Folic acid
• Bone marrow depression (hypoplastic), erythropoietin deficiency
– Increased cell destruction (haemolytic)
4. Iron – Basics
• Total Body Iron content – 3.5 gm (average): Male – 50 mg/kg and Female
– 38 mg/kg
• Hemoglobin – 66% - Protoporphyrin – 4 Iron containing haeme residues
• Loss of 100 ml of blood – 50 mg elemental Iron
• To raise 1 gm/dl – 200 mg elemental Iron required
• Stored only in Ferric form (Fe3+
) – in combination with apoferritin – mainly
in RE Cells
• Many cellular enzymes – cytochromes, peroxidases, catalases, xanthine
oxidases and some mitochondrial enzymes
• Severe Iron deficiency affects all cells
• Daily requirement: Male: 0.5 to 1 mg/day; Female: 1.5 to 2 mg/day (more
in pregnancy) ………… Sources ???
Apoferritn + Fe3+
Ferritin Haemosiderinaggregates
5. Iron Absorption
• Diet – 10 to 20 mg – absorbed from all over the Intestine (more
from upper part)
• 2 forms – haeme and Inorganic
– Haeme – minor form of dietary Iron but absorbed better without any
transporter
– Inorganic – in ferric form but absorbs lesser – converted to ferrous
form in Intestine for absorption – needs transporter
– Divalent metal transporter (DMT1) and Ferroportin (FP)
• Factors increasing absorption – acid, reducing substances – ascorbic
acid, amino acid etc. and meat
• Factors impending absorption – alkali (antacids), Phosphates,
phytates, tetracycline and presence of other food
• Mucosal block: from mucosal cell – transported to plasma or
remains stored in mucosal cell by forming ferritin - Ferritin curtain
– Balance between those two – detremines how much Iron to enter
body - by haematopoietic transcription factor
6. Iron – Transport, storage etc.
• In plasma immediately converted to Fe3+
form – complexed
with transferrin (Tf) – Total Plasma Iron – 3 mg - recycled
• Transported to RBCs by transferrin receptors (TfRs) –
endocytosis – Iron dissociates from TfR in acidic pH of
vesicles
• Iron utilized for Hb synthesis – TfRs return to surface
• In Iron deficiency – TfRs increase
• Storage – RE cells in Liver, spleen, bone and muscles as
ferritin and haemsiderin
• Apoferritin – determines how much Iron storage needed -
synthesis regulated by Iron status and Iron regulating
element on mRNA – blocked in low Iron – no apoferritin
synthesis – in high Iron state – more apoferritin synthesis
• Excretion – 0.5 to 1 mg/day – exfoliation in GI mecosal
cells, RBCs and in Bile …. Also in skin, urine and sweat
7. Iron –Absorption, Transport, storage
etc. - Image
Essentials of Medical pharmacology by KD Tripathi – 6th
Edition, JAYPEE, 2008
8. Iron Preparations - Oral
• Preferred route – ferrous salts – high Iron content, inexpensive,
better absorbed than ferric salts …. Gastric irritation and
constipation limits use
– Ferrous sulfate (20% hydrated salt and dried salt 32% or 65 mg)
– Ferrous gluconate (12% Iron or 28-36 mg)
– Ferrous fumerate (33% or 106 mg)
– Colloidal ferric hydroxide (50%) ……… 150 to 200 mg per day
• Other preparations: Ferrous succinate, Iron choline citrate, Iron
calcium complex, Ferric ammonium citrate, Iron hydroxy
polymaltose … low Iron content (less GI upset) and expensive
• No to Vit. B –complex combination (GOI) with Iron and Folic acid
preparations and also no to sustained release preparations
• Dosage: 200 mg daily in 3 divided doses (3 – 5 mg/kg for children)
• ADRs: Differ in susceptibility – individuals …. Epigastric pain, heart
burn, nausea, vomiting, staining of teeth, metallic taste, bloating,
colic -- CONSTIPATION
9. Iron Preparations - Parenteral
• Indications:
– Failure to absorb oral Iron – malabsorption, inflammatory bowel
disease (proximal small bowel)
– Post gastrectomy conditions
– Severe deficiency with chronic bleeding
– Either intolerance and non-compliance to oral Iron
– With erythropoietin
• Calculation: 4.4 X body weight (kg) X Hb deficit (g/dl)
• Not faster absorption than oral but stores replenish faster
• Preparations: Iron-dextran (colloidal solution) 50 mg/ml
Iron and Iron-sorbitol-citric acid complex and Sodium ferric
gluconate complex in sucrose
10. Parenteral Iron
• IM: Z technique – deep in
gluteal region – 2 ml daily or
on alternate days or 5 ml each
side on same day – Iron
sorbitol – 1.5 to 2.00 ml per
day
• IV: Iron dextran - 0.5 ml test
dose –for 5 to 10 minutes … 2
ml for 10 minutes
• Or in 500 ml glucose/saline
slow infusion – constant
observation
• Terminate if – giddiness,
paresthesia or chest
constrictionEssentials of Medical pharmacology by KD Tripathi – 6th
Edition, JAYPEE, 2008
11. Iron – contd.
• ADRs:
– Local: Pain in IM injection, pigmentation of skin, sterile abscess
– Systemic: Fever, headache, joint pain, flushing, palpitation, chest pain,
dyspnoea, lymph node enlargement
• Metallic taste with sorbitol
• Anaphylactoid reaction – Kidney diseases (no sorbitol)
• Uses:
– Iron deficiency anaemia: Nutritional deficiency, chronic blood loss (GIT
ulcers and hook worm)
• Oral Iron preferred : Target – 0.5 to 1 g/dl per week – 1 to 3 months therapy
plus 2 to 3 months afterwards
• Prophylaxis: Ceiling on Iron absorption - = 3 mg/day ….. Pregnancy and
infancy to be taken care of well in advance
– Megaloblastic anaemia
– As astringent: Ferric chloride
12. Acute Iron Poisoning
• Infants and children – 10 to 20 tablets (60 mg/kg Iron)
• Symptoms: Vomiting, abdominal pain, haematemesis, diarrhoea,
lethargy, cyanosis, dehydration, acidosis, convulsion, CVS collapse
and death (12 – 36 Hours)
– Haemorrhage and inflammation of gut, hepatic necrosis and brain
damage
• Treatment:
– Prevent further absorption: Induce vomitingor gastric lavage with
NaHCO3 – to render Iron insoluble …… and also Egg yolk and Milk orally
– Antidote: Desferrioxamine: 0.5 to 1.00 gm IM repeated 4 – 12 Hourly
or IV 10 – 15 mg/kg/Hour (max 75 mg/day) till serum levels fall
– DTPA and Calcium edetate
– Supportive: Fluid and electrolyte, correction of acidosis and Diazepam
14. Introduction
• Complex cobalt containing compounds
Cyanocobalamin and hydroxocobalamin
• Physical: Water soluble, red crystals
synthesized only by microorganisms
• Sources: Liver, Kidney, sea fish, egg yolk ….
Streptomyces geireus
• Daily Requirement: 1 – 3 mcg (Pregnancy and
Lactation3 – 5 mcg)
15. Vit. B12 - Metabolic functions
• Linked with folic acid metabolism – megaloblastic anaemia
indistinguishable
• Two active forms - Deoxy-adenosyl-cobalamin (DAB12) and methyl-
cobalamin (methyl-B12)
1) Vit. B12 needed for conversion of homocysteine to methionine – methionine
is methyl group donor in metabolic reactions – also critical for making THFA
available
2) Purine and pyrymidine synthesis is affected – folate trap – non availability
of thymidylate for DNA synthesis
3) Malonic acid Succinic acid - important for propionic acid
metabolism (Carbohydrate and lipid metabolism) – linked to demyelination
in Vit. B12 deficiency
4) Methionine S-adenosyl methionine – neurological
damage
5) Vit. B12 is needed for cell growth and multiplications
16. Vit. B12 - Kinetics
• Absorption: Present in food as protein conjugates – released
by cooking/proteolysis
– IF forms a complex with Vit. B12 – attaches to specific receptor in
mucosa – absorbed by active transport
• Transport: In combination with transcobalamin II (TCII) –
congenital absence/abnormal protein (liver disease and BM
disease) – defective supply to tissues
• Storage: In liver – 4/5th
of Body`s Vit.B12
• Degradation: Not degraded in body – excreted mainly in Bile –
enterohepatic circulation ….. absence of IF and malabsorption
Vs Nutritional deficiency
• Parenteral – completely absorbed -IM and SC administration
– excreted via urine
17. Deficiency - Vit. B12
• Deficiency: Addisonian pernicious anaemia (destruction of
parietal cells – IF absent), gastric mucosal damage, damaged
intestinal mucosa, consumption by abnormal flora (blind loop
syndrome & fish tape worm), nutritional deficiency, increased
demand
• Manifestations: Megaloblastic anaemia, glossitis, GI
disturbance, degeneration of spinal chord and peripheral
neuritis – diminished vibration and position sense,
paresthesia, depressed reflexes and mental changes
• Preparations: Cyanocobalamin Injection, Hydroxocobalamin
Injection and Methylcobalamin Tablets
18. Vit. B12 – Uses and ADRs
• Prophylactically in diabetics and alcoholics – to prevent
peripheral neuritis – 1.5 mg/day
• Treatment of deficiency states: Add Folic acid and Iron
– Very quick response – appetite increases, patient feel better, mucosal
lesions heal, neurological parameters improve
– If due to IF factor lacking – IM or SC (not IV) – necessary to by pass
defective absor scheduleption – daily-weekly-monthly
• Mega doses: in neuropathies, psychiatric disorders,
cutaneous sarcoid
• Tobacco amblyopia – cyanide to cyanocobalamin
• ADRs: Safe – allergic reactions due to contaminants
20. Introduction
• Physical: Yellow crystals, insoluble in water, Pteroyl glutamic acid
(PGA) – pteridine + paraminobenzoic acids + glutamic acid
• Daily requirement: 0.2 mg per day (0.8 mg in pregnancy and
lactation)
• Kinetics:
– Absorption: As polyglutamates in food – glutamates split off and
absorbed in upper intestine ….. Reduction to DHFA and methylation
also occurs at same site
– Transport: as methyl-THFA – partly bound to plasma protein
– Store: tissues extract FA rapidly and store as polyglutamates in cells.
Liver takes up major portion – releases methyl-THFA – enterohepatic
circulation (alcohol interferes)
– Excretion: Pharmacological doses – excreted in Urine
21. Folic acid – Metabolic function
• Conversion of homocysteine to methionine
• Generation of thymidylate
• Conversion of serine to glycine
• Purine synthesis de novo
• Histidine metabolism
25. Introduction
• Sialoglycoprotein hormone – produced by peritubular cells of Kidney
• Recombinant human erythropoietin (Epoetin α, β) – administerd IV or SC
• Half life: 6 – 10 Hours
• Required for erythropoiesis: anaemia and hypoxia sensed by kidney cells –
EPO secretes and acts on marrow:
– Stimulates proliferation of colony forming cells of erythroid series
– Induces Hb formation and erythroblast maturation
– Release of reticulocytes
• MOA: Binds to specific EPO receptor (JAK-STAT-kinase) – alters
phosphorylation of intracellular proteins and activates transcription
factors to regulate gene expression – erythropoiesis
26. Erythropoietin – Uses and ADRs
• Anaemia of chronic renal failure – 25 – 100 U/kg SC or IV 3
times a day – concomitant Iron therapy
• Anaemia with AIDS patients treated with zidovudine
• Cancer chemotherapy induced anaemia
• Preoperative increased blood production – autologous
transfusion
• ADRs: Nonimmunogenic, ----- ADRs occur due to increase in
haematocrit, viscosity and peripheral resistance – increased
clot formation in AV- shunts, hypertensive episodes, seizure,
flu like symptoms
27. Remember ….. Take home !
• Haematinics – The Perfect example of a
Teamwork