Here you can find out what the different rare anaemias are and what they entail

Rare Anaemias
Rare types of Anaemia

Think of your red blood cells as the transport system that carries oxygen to your body’s tissues. When you have anemia, your body doesn’t make enough red blood cells, or these cells don’t work as well as they should. You end up feeling weak, tired, and short of breath.

Anemia comes in many forms. Iron-deficiency anemia is most common. Other types of the disease affect only small numbers of people. Here’s a look at some of the rare types of anemia and how they’re treated.

Aplastic (or Hypoplastic) Anemia blood cells are made from stem cells in your bone marrow. When you have aplastic anemia, stem cells in your bone marrow are damaged and can’t make enough new blood cells. You’re either born with aplastic anemia, meaning you inherited a gene from your parents that caused it, or you develop it (acquired). Acquired aplastic anemia is the more common of the two, and sometimes it’s only temporary.

Acquired causes include:

Autoimmune diseases such as:

  • Lupus
  • Rheumatoid arthritis

Chemicals such as:

  • Pesticides
  • Arsenic
  • Benzene

Infections including:

  • Hepatitis
  • Epstein-Barr virus
  • HIV
  • Radiation and chemotherapy treatments for cancer

Inherited conditions such as Fanconi anemia, Shwachman-Diamond syndrome, and Diamond-Blackfan anemia, can damage cells and also cause aplastic anemia.

Symptoms of aplastic anemia can include everything from shortness of breath and dizziness to headaches, pale skin, chest pain, fast heart rate (tachycardia), and cold hands and feet.

One way to treat aplastic anemia is with a blood transfusion. You’ll get a donor’s blood through a vein. A stem cell transplant can also treat aplastic anemia. It replaces the damaged stem cells in your bone marrow with healthy cells.