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Apex Nursing

Chart — Hematology

Anemia Type Comparison Chart

Start with cell size (MCV), confirm with the second lab — ferritin for small cells, B12/folate for large ones, reticulocytes for normal-sized — and the type, treatment, and teaching follow.

Educational use only. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Anemias Side by Side

TypeCell SizeKey LabsCommon CausesTreatmentNursing Notes
Iron deficiencyMicrocytic (↓MCV)↓Ferritin, ↓iron, ↑TIBCBlood loss (GI, menstrual), poor intake, malabsorptionOral or IV iron; find and fix the bleeding sourceIron on empty stomach with vitamin C; dark stools expected; constipation management; GI source workup in adults
B12 deficiencyMacrocytic (↑MCV)↓B12; intrinsic-factor antibodies in pernicious anemiaPernicious anemia, gastric surgery, strict vegan intake, ileal diseaseParenteral or high-dose B12 — lifelong in pernicious anemiaNeuro findings (paresthesias, balance, cognition) are the differentiator; damage becomes permanent if untreated
Folate deficiencyMacrocytic (↑MCV)↓Folate, normal B12Poor intake, alcohol use disorder, pregnancy demand, some drugsOral folate; dietary repletionNo neuro findings; critical pre-conception and first trimester (neural tube defects)
AplasticNormocyticPancytopenia — ↓RBC, ↓WBC, ↓platelets; ↓reticsMarrow failure — idiopathic, drugs, chemicals, radiation, viralImmunosuppression, transplant candidacy, transfusion supportInfection precautions + bleeding precautions simultaneously; this is a protective-care diagnosis
HemolyticNormocytic↑Retics, ↑LDH, ↑indirect bilirubin, ↓haptoglobinAutoimmune, drug-induced, mechanical (valves), sickle cell, transfusion reactionTreat the cause; steroids for autoimmune; transfusion support per providerJaundice and dark urine; marrow compensating (high retics) while cells die early
Chronic diseaseNormocytic (sometimes microcytic)Normal/↑ferritin, ↓iron, ↓TIBCChronic inflammation — CKD, autoimmune disease, malignancyTreat the underlying disease; erythropoiesis-stimulating agents in CKD per protocolIron supplements alone do not fix it — ferritin pattern separates it from iron deficiency

Two-Lab Shortcuts

• Microcytic + low ferritin = iron deficiency  ·  microcytic + normal/high ferritin = chronic disease

• Macrocytic + neuro symptoms = B12  ·  macrocytic without = folate

• Normocytic + high retics = loss or hemolysis  ·  + low retics = underproduction

• All three cell lines down = aplastic — switch to protective care

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with AABB (transfusion standards) · American Society of Hematology (ASH). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →