Erythrocytosis
Erythrocytosis (or polycythemia) is the presence of an excessive number of red blood cells in the circulation. It can be primary or arise secondarily to another pathology.
Definition
Absolute erythrocytosis is defined as a red cell mass which is >125% predicted for sex and age .
Although the diagnosis of erythrocytosis is often put forward when the hemoglobin and/or hematocrit are elevated, they can both be raised, especially the former, yet the red cell mass not be abnormal. Nevertheless if the hematocrit is >0.60 in men or 0.56 in women, then an absolute erythrocytosis is certain .
Causes
Following is a list of primary and secondary causes of erythrocytosis.
Secondary etiologies are much more common :
Primary
Congenital
- erythropoietin receptor (EPOR) mutations
Acquired
- polycythemia vera
- genetic (LNK) mutations
Secondary
Congenital
- high oxygen affinity hemoglobins
- >100 mutations described
- abnormal 2,3 bisphosphoglycerate mutase
- methemoglobinemia
- dysfunctional oxygen-sensing pathway
- e.g. VHL mutations
Acquired
Hypoxia-driven
- central hypoxia
- chronic lung disease
- right-to-left cardiopulmonary shunts
- carbon monoxide toxicity
- smoking-related polycythemia
- sleep apnea (and other hypoventilation states)
- living at high altitude
- local renal hypoxia
Pathological erythropoietin secretion
- neoplasms
Exogenous erythropoietin
- drug administration (physician-directed or illicit)
- erythropoietin (EPO)
- androgens