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[Diagnosis of anemia associated with alcoholic cirrhosis].

We report here the case of a 62-year-old patient with Child-Pugh stage C ethylic cirrhosis associated with severe macrocytic anaemia, refractory to iterative transfusions and withdrawal. After a haemorrhagic, deficiency-related, or sideroblastic etiology was ruled out, haemolytic anaemia was suspected. A blood smear allowed diagnosis of haemolytic anaemia with acanthocytes. This offers the opportunity to discuss anaemia in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis, a frequent complication spanning a broad severity range and having the potential to be life-threatening. Its origin can be multifactorial : acute haemorrhage, dilution, haemolysis (here due to acanthocytosis), marrow insufficiency caused by direct alcohol toxicity, malnutrition, iron deficiency, vitamin B9 or B12 deficiency, chronic inflammation, splenic sequestration induced by portal hypertension...

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