Hemolytic anemia has different clinical manifestations due to acute and chronic. Most patients have weakness, pallor, jaundice, and deepening of urine color.
Hemolytic anemia is an anemia that occurs as a result of an increased rate of red blood cell destruction (i.e., shortened red blood cell life span) that exceeds the compensatory capacity of the bone marrow for hematopoiesis. The clinical symptoms of patients are closely related to the place, degree and rate of hemolysis, and cardiopulmonary compensatory capacity, and show great differences.
Generally, patients with acute hemolytic anemia may have chills, fever, headache, vomiting, abdominal pain, back pain, hemoglobinuria, followed by jaundice and other manifestations of severe anemia. In contrast, chronic hemolytic anemia often has jaundice and splenomegaly in addition to anemia manifestations such as pallor, weakness, dizziness, tinnitus, palpitations, and shortness of breath.
Once the patient appears weakness, pallor, jaundice, lumbago, urine color deepening and other symptoms promptly consult a doctor.