Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Query: UMLS:C0002871 (
anemia
)
52,094
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 14 year-old patient developed severe
anemia
and splenomegaly 2 days after the onset of a febrile upper airway infection. The hemoglobin concentration had dropped to 1.1 g/dl. Death occurred as consequence of the acute
anemia
and peripheral circulatory failure. The crisis was caused by an acute splenic sequestration. Hemoglobin SC disease could be identified as the underlying disorder. Hemoglobin SC disease usually has a milder course than sickle cell disease. However the patients may develop the same crisis-like symptoms.
Splenic sequestration
is caused by the occlusion of the splenic sinuses due to sickled and aggregated erythrocytes with subsequent trapping of large blood volumes and circulatory failure. Regular transfusions and/or splenectomy are recommended to prevent splenic sequestration crisis.
...
PMID:[Fatal course of a sequestration crisis in hemoglobin SC disease]. 841 34
Children comprised 52% of patients with Sickle Cell Disease (SCD). Types of Sickle Cell Disease encountered were SS (92.7%). SB thalassaemia (6.7%) and SD disease (0.7%). The disease was widespread in almost all castes and communities in the society; largest number of patients (20%) belonging to scheduled castes and only 1.4% were from scheduled tribes. Maximum number of cases were in the age group 2-4 and 4-6 years, many of whom died around this age. Besides attacks of pain, jaundice and
anemia
, frequent attacks of fever with
anemia
or only
anemia
in childhood were a predominant presenting feature.
Splenic sequestration
was frequent (10.1%). The patients usually had a steady state hemoglobin level of 6-10 g/dl, with which they thrived well. Fetal hemoglobin was 5-30%. Blood transfusion was not a frequent requirement, but prophylactic long acting penicillin was helpful in preventing frequency of crisis.
...
PMID:Clinical profile of sickle cell disease in Orissa. 1077 15
Splenic sequestration
is a potentially life threatening event that is characteristic for sickle cell disease. For reasons unknown a fraction of or even the entire blood volume is trapped in the splenic sinuses within a few hours and thus is no longer available for circulation. The result is splenomegaly, hypovolemia,
anemia
and extreme reticulocytosis. If the sequestered blood volume is very large the patient goes into fatal hypovolemic shock unless transfused instantly. If the sequestered volume is small there is a chance of spontaneous resolution. The etiology of splenic sequestration is not known. Children with homozygous sickle cell disease (HbSS) are at risk until age 6 years while individuals with compound heterozygous disease (HbSbetaThal, HbSC, HbSD) may develop splenic sequestration even in adulthood. Parents of infants and toddlers with sickle cell disease need to learn how to palpate the spleen in order to detect splenomegaly as early as possible and take the child to the hospital.
Splenic sequestration
with a drop in hemoglobin of more than 3 g/dl below the patient's usual hemoglobin level is a clear indication for splenectomy regardless of the patient's age as splenic sequestration tends to recur.
...
PMID:[Splenic sequestration in patients with sickle cell disease. ]. 1197 13
Immunocompromised patients are more susceptible to recurrent non-typhoidal
Salmonella
(NTS) bacteremia. A key manifestation of HIV infection is the loss of CD4 T cells, which are crucial for immunity to
Salmonella
infection. We characterized the consequences of CD4 T cell depletion in mice where virulent
Salmonella
establish chronic infection, similar to chronic NTS disease in humans.
Salmonella
-infected, CD4-depleted 129X1/SvJ mice remained chronically colonized for at least 5 weeks, displaying increased splenomegaly and more severe splenitis than infected mice with CD4 T cells. Mature erythrocytes, immature erythroid cells and phagocytes accounted for the largest increase in splenic cellularity.
Anemia
, which is associated with increased mortality in
Salmonella
-infected humans, was exacerbated by CD4 depletion in infected mice and was accompanied by increased splenic sequestration of erythrocytes and fewer erythropoietic elements in the bone marrow, despite significantly elevated levels of circulating erythropoietin.
Splenic sequestration
of red blood cells, the appearance of circulating poikilocytes, and elevated pro-inflammatory cytokines suggest inflammation-induced damage to erythrocytes contributes to
anemia
and splenic retention of damaged cells in infected animals. Depleting CD4 T cells led to increased myeloid cells in peripheral blood, spleen and bone marrow, as well as expansion of CD8 T cells, which has been observed in CD4-depleted humans. This work describes a mouse model of
Salmonella
infection that recapitulates several aspects of human disease and will allow us to investigate the interplay of innate and adaptive immune functions with chronic inflammation,
anemia
and susceptibility to
Salmonella
infection.
...
PMID:Failure of CD4 T cell-deficient hosts to control chronic non-typhoidal
Salmonella
infection leads to exacerbated inflammation, chronic anemia, and altered myelopoiesis. 3304 10