Anemia. Differential diagnosis

October 14, 2016

ICD-10:
III.D60-D64.D63.0 *    Anemia in neoplasm (C00-D48 +)
III.D60-D64.D63 *    Anemia in chronic diseases classified elsewhere
III.D60-D64.D61.9    Aplastic anemia, unspecified
III.D55-D59.D59    Acquired hemolytic anemia
III.D55-D59.D58.9    Hereditary hemolytic anemia, unspecified
III.D50-D53.D52    Folic deficiency anemia
III.D50-D53.D51    Vitamin-B12-deficiency anemia
III.D50-D53.D50    Iron-deficiency anemia
III.D55-D59.D56.8    Other Thalassemia
III.D55-D59.D56.1    Beta-thalassemia
III.D55-D59.D56.0    Alpha-thalassemia
Anemia, hematology, therapy, differential diagnosis
Not only hematologists face anemia, but also general practitioners, obstetrician-gynecologists, surgeons and many other specialists. In fact, this is a universal syndrome. In the professional literature, a large number of different anemias are isolated. Some of its varieties have a relatively favorable prognosis, while others develop against the background of malignant diseases. That is why a timely and complete differential diagnosis of anemia is of particular clinical significance.