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Background

Copper deficiency is a very rare disease and may be caused by several different disease states iincluding dietary deficiency, hypoproteinemic states (starvation, malnutrition, or malabsorption), excess excretion (nephrotic syndrome), Wilson disease, Menkes syndrome, and excess ingestion of zinc.

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REFERENCE METHODS CHARACTERIZATION

 

CLINICAL UTILITY CHARACTERIZATION
BONE MARROW

Rare cause of anemia and neutropenia

Cytoplasmic vacuolization in erythroid and myeloid precursors and ringed sideroblasts

 

INTERFERING DISEASES OR SUBSTANCES THAT ALTER LEVELS CHARACTERIZATION
ZINC INGESTION  
Zinc-Induced Copper Deficiency
A Report of Three Cases Initially Recognized on Bone Marrow Examination

Monte S. Willis, MD, PhD, etal.
Am J Clin Pathol 2005;123:125-131 Abstract quote

Copper deficiency is a rare cause of sideroblastic anemia and neutropenia that often is not suspected clinically. The morphologic findings in bone marrow, while not pathognomonic, are sufficiently characteristic to suggest the diagnosis, leading to further testing to establish the correct diagnosis. Excess zinc ingestion is among the causes of copper deficiency.

We present 3 cases of zinc-induced copper deficiency in which the diagnosis first was suggested on the basis of bone marrow examination. The first patient was a 47-year-old man with a debilitating peripheral neuropathy that had progressed during the previous 18 months, mild anemia, and severe neutropenia. The second was a 21-year-old man receiving zinc supplementation for acrodermatitis enteropathica in whom moderate normocytic anemia and neutropenia developed. The third patient was a 42-year-old man with anemia, severe neutropenia, and a peripheral neuropathy that had progressed during 8 months.

The bone marrow findings in all cases suggested copper deficiency, which was confirmed by further laboratory testing and determined to be due to zinc excess. The morphologic features, clinical manifestations, differential diagnosis, and pathogenetic mechanisms are discussed.

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Last Updated January 12, 2005

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