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Query: UMLS:C0002871 (anemia)
52,094 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The prevalence of iron deficiency anemia has decreased in recent years because of improved dietary habits. Yet, iron deficiency anemia is still the most common anemia. Among mature adults, anemia of chronic disease is probably more common. Mean corpuscular volume and red cell distribution width, along with a peripheral smear examination, can often distinguish iron deficiency anemia from other common microcytic anemias, such as thalassemia minor. A normal serum iron level excludes iron deficiency anemia and indicates other causes for microcytic anemia. Often, a low serum iron level and total iron-binding capacity are due to chronic disease, and measurement of serum ferritin or a bone marrow stain for hemosiderin will be necessary to diagnose iron deficiency. Iron therapy to restore the red cell mass should be continued until iron stores are replenished.
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PMID:Iron deficiency anemia. How to diagnose and correct. 240 79

Haematological data on children with mild iron deficiency-anaemia are compared with those of patients with heterozygous beta-thalassemia. The differential diagnosis of beta-thalassemia minor may suspected on the grounds of the blood smear. Confirmation of the diagnosis is based on the MCV, HbA2 and the graphic determination of EVR50 as well as by family survey. With these simple methods beta-thalassemia minor may be diagnosed with reasonable certainty even in the absence of a special laboratory for the determination of the beta-chain deficiency of hemoglobin. The importance of the correct differential diagnosis is stressed because of the danger of unnecessary iron therapy in thalassemia.
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PMID:[Erroneous diagnosis of iron deficiency anemia]. 248 26

A new classification of anemias, which is based on mean corpuscular volume and quantitative anisocytosis (red blood cell distribution width), was evaluated in 331 pregnant women on initial presentation for prenatal care. Seventy-four of them had severe iron depletion (serum ferritin level less than or equal to 10 ng/dl). Contrary to the above classification, early iron deficiency without anemia was infrequently identified by an increase in distribution width (4 of 25 patients). The distribution width was not consistently increased in the 49 anemic, iron-deficient patients; 34 were normal and would have been considered to have thalassemia minor or anemia of chronic disease according to the new classification. The distribution width was no more sensitive than the mean corpuscular volume in suggesting iron deficiency. This study does not confirm the usefulness of the new classification in the diagnosis of iron deficiency in this patient population.
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PMID:An evaluation of red blood cell heterogeneity (increased red blood cell distribution width) in iron deficiency of pregnancy. 291 16

The laboratory evaluation of anemia begins with a complete blood count and reticulocyte count. The anemia is then categorized as microcytic, macrocytic or normocytic, with or without reticulocytosis. Examination of the peripheral smear and a small number of specific tests confirm the diagnosis. The serum iron level, total iron-binding capacity, serum ferritin level and hemoglobin electrophoresis generally separate the microcytic anemias. The erythrocyte size-distribution width may be particularly helpful in distinguishing iron deficiency from thalassemia minor. Significant changes have occurred in the laboratory evaluation of macrocytic anemia, and a new syndrome of nitrous oxide-induced megaloblastosis and neurologic dysfunction has been recognized. A suggested approach to the hemolytic anemias includes using the micro-Coombs' test and ektacytometry. Finally, a number of causes have been identified for normocytic anemia without reticulocytosis, including normocytic megaloblastic anemia and the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
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PMID:Laboratory evaluation of anemia. 357 35

Hematologic abnormalities in childhood lead poisoning may be due, in part, to the presence of other disorders, such as iron deficiency or thalassemia minor. In order to reassess increased lead burden as a cause of microcytic anemia, we studied 58 children with class III or IV lead poisoning, normal iron stores, and no inherited hemoglobinopathy. Anemia occurred in 12% and microcytosis in 21% of these children. The combination of anemia and microcytosis was found in only one of 58 patients (2%). When only children with class IV lead poisoning were studied, the occurrence of microcytosis increased to 46%. However, the combination of microcytosis and anemia was found in only one of these 13 more severely affected patients. Microcytic anemia was similarly uncommon in children with either blood lead concentration greater than or equal to 50 microgram/100 ml. These data indicate that microcytosis and anemia occur much less commonly than previously reported in childhood lead poisoning uncomplicated by other hematologic disorders.
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PMID:Reassessment of the microcytic anemia of lead poisoning. 723 54

A young American woman of Thai ancestry living in Ohio and a man of Vietnamese origin living in Iowa are believed to be the first recognized hemoglobin E homozygotes residing in the western hemisphere. Both were clinically well and exhibited neither pallor nor icterus nor splenomegaly. Their blood exhibited marked microcytosis and mild erythrocytosis. Hemoglobin was 99% E and 1% F, 97% E and 3% F, respectively. These features were similar to those previously reported from Southeast Asia and Madagascar in the few well-documented reports of homozygous hemoglobin E. A 51Cr erythrocyte survival study indicated a normal t1/2 of 28 days. Also demonstrated were minimal decrease in whole blood O2 affinity and increased ratio of alpha/non-alpha globin chain synthesis. Mild hemolytic anemia is not, as usually stated, a feature of this condition, which closely mimics a very mild thalassemia minor. Anemia, when found with high proportions of hemoglobin E, should not be attributed to the homozygous hemoglobinopathy. Persons with homozygous hemoglobin E should be reassured as to its benign implications.
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PMID:Homozygous hemoglobin E mimics beta-thalassemia minor without anemia or hemolysis: hematologic, functional, and biosynthetic studies of first North American cases. 739 58

Twenty subjects--patients with anemia and their close relatives representing 7 families, were tested for thalassemia. Heterozygotic beta-thalassemia was detected in 17 cases. The national composition of this patient population was as follows: 7 Pathans (Afghanistan), 1 family; 2 Armenians (Georgia), mother and son; 2 Tajiks, sibs; 2 patients of mixed Russian-Ukrainian-Polish-Azerbaijan origin, mother and son; 1 Russian-Arab child and his Arab father (Syria); 1 Uzbek woman and 1 Russian child. The mean content of Hb in the blood for patients with heterozygotic beta-thalassemia is 110 +/- 3.8 g/liter, that of HbA2 fraction 4.8 +/- 0.26% and of HbF fraction 2.6 +/- 0.39%. Clinical manifestations of the disease varied, being more grave in children than in adults. In an Armenian family from Batumi thalassemia minor was diagnosed in the mother and son, whereas in the father and other son a periodic disease was revealed. In a family of 7 members from Afghanistan thalassemia minor was found in 4 representing the paternal line, minimal thalassemia was suspected in 3, and a deficiency of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in red blood cells was revealed in 5: in the mother and 4 children. No increase of methemoglobin level was revealed in either of the examinees.
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PMID:[Beta-thalassemia and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency]. 904 21

Twelve patients with anemias and their close relatives were examined: 8 adults (3 men and 5 women) and 4 children (3 boys and 1 girl). Six of them were Armenians, 1 woman was Russian, and the rest were of mixed origin: 3 Russian-Azerbaijan-Ukrainian, 1 child Russian-Ukrainian-African, and 1 woman Russian-Ukrainian. Hemoglobinopathies were detected in 10 subjects from 4 families (3 families from Donetsk and 1 from Moscow). Homozygotic beta-thalassemia major (Hb F 98.9%) was diagnosed in a 2-year-old Armenian girl from Donetsk. The girl lags behind in development and suffers from anemia with hepatosplenomegaly and jaundice. Heterozygotic beta-thalassemia minor with increased levels of Hb A2 and Hb F was diagnosed in her parents (Armenians from Azerbaijan). A 15-year-old Russian-Azerbaijan-Ukrainian boy from another family in Donetsk had beta-thalassemia with HbD (94%). The boy suffers from anemia with hepatosplenomegaly, jaundice, and chronic hepatitis. Heterozygotic beta-thalassemia with increased levels of Hb A2 and Hb F was revealed in proband's mother and brother; the father was not examined. alpha-Thalassemia is suspected in a 3-year-old boy from a Russian-Ukrainian-African family in Donetsk; he presented with a very small "fast" abnormal hemoglobin fraction. The boy suffers from anemia with splenomegaly and systolic murmur. Blurred form of thalassemia minor is diagnosed in the mother. The father, an African from Zaire, was not examined. Heterozygotic beta-thalassemia with increased Hb A2 level was revealed in a 20-year-old Armenian boy from Moscow. He presented with manifest splenomegaly, chronic gastritis, and mitral valve prolapse. His mother suffers from thalassemia minor, was anemic during pregnancy, and there are cases of anemia in the family. No hematologic disorders were found in the father. No hemoglobinopathies were detected in a 59-year-old Russian women from the town of Tver with very grave anemia; apparently, her condition was acquired, but not hereditary. Data on patients in the city of Donetsk are of special interest, for there are virtually no reports about hemoglobinopathies in the Ukraine.
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PMID:[Beta-thalassemia and Hb D in patients with anemia]. 957 28

Of the uncommon anemias, "common" types include the anemia of renal disease, thalassemia, myelodysplastic syndrome and the anemia of chronic disease. These conditions may be suggested by the clinical presentation, laboratory test values and peripheral blood smear, or by failure of the anemia to respond to iron supplements or nutrient replacement. The principal cause of the anemia of renal disease is a decreased production of red blood cells related to a relative deficiency of erythropoietin. When treatment is required, erythropoietin is administered, often with iron supplementation. In the anemia of chronic disease, impaired iron transport decreases red blood cell production. Treatment is predominantly directed at the underlying condition. Since iron stores are usually normal, iron administration is not beneficial. Thalassemia minor results from a congenital abnormality of hemoglobin synthesis. The disorder may masquerade as mild iron deficiency anemia, but iron therapy and transfusions are often not indicated. In the myelodysplastic syndrome, blood cell components fail to mature, and the condition may progress to acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. The rate of progression depends on the subtype of myelodysplasia, but the leukemia is usually resistant to therapy.
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PMID:'Common' uncommon anemias. 1006 9

Structural hemoglobin (Hb) variants typically are based on a point mutation in a globin gene that produce a single amino acid substitution in a globin chain. Although most are of limited clinical significance, a few important subtypes have been identified with some frequency. Homozygous Hb C and Hb S (sickle cell disease) produce significant clinical manifestations, whereas Hb E and Hb D homozygotes may be mildly symptomatic. Although heterozygotes for these variants are typically asymptomatic, diagnosis may be important for genetic counseling. Thalassemia, in contrast, results from quantitative reductions in globin chain synthesis. Those with diminished beta-globin chains are termed beta-thalassemias, whereas those with decreased alpha-chain production are called alpha-thalassemias. Severity of clinical manifestations in these disorders relates to the amount of globin chain produced and the stability of residual chains present in excess. The thalassemia minor syndromes are characterized clinically by mild anemia with persistent microcytosis. Thalassemia intermedia (i.e., Hb H disease) is typified by a moderate, variably compensated hemolytic anemia that may present with clinical symptoms during a period of physiologic stress such as infection, pregnancy, or surgery. The thalassemia major syndromes produce severe, life-threatening anemia. alpha-Thalassemia major usually is incompatible with extrauterine life; beta-thalassemia major presents in infancy and requires life-long transfusion therapy and/or bone marrow transplantation for successful control of the disease. Double heterozygosity for certain structural variants and/or thalassemia syndromes may also lead to severe clinical disease. Several guidelines have been published that outline the required steps for hemoglobinopathy and thalassemia investigation. The availability of HPLC has streamlined many of these requirements, allowing an efficient stepwise diagnostic strategy for these complex disorders.
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PMID:Laboratory investigation of hemoglobinopathies and thalassemias: review and update. 1092 23


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