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Query: UMLS:C0002895 (sickle cell disease)
11,747 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An overview is given over etiology and prognosis of cerebral ischemias until the age of 40. In a time period of 19 years, 168 patients were diagnosed with cerebral ischemia until the age of 40 (91 females, 77 males). The most frequent etiology is premature atherosclerosis in patients with vascular risk factors (up to 50%). Cardiogenic embolism is responsible for 1 to 34% of the cases: cardiac valve diseases and endocarditis being the most frequent sources. In 2 to 19% a vasculitis is diagnosed. While infectious arteritis is especially frequent in countries of the third world, immunovasculitides are common in Europe and the USA. Noninflammatory vasculopathies include spontaneous or traumatic dissection, fibromuscular dysplasia and vascular malformations. A migrainous stroke is especially frequent in female smokers with intake of oral contraceptives. During pregnancy both sinus thrombosis and arterial ischemia occur. Hematologic causes for ischemia are polycythemia, thrombocytosis and genetic diseases (sickle cell anemia, AT3-deficiency). Cerebral ischemia may occur in connection with the ingestion of ergot-derivates. The prognosis of cerebral ischemia in young adults is better than in older stroke-patients.
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PMID:[Cerebral ischemia in young adults]. 193 40

The possibility that myocardial ischemia may be associated with chest pain during painful crises was evaluated prospectively in 20 patients (11 women and nine men) with sickle cell disease (19 SS, 1 S beta + thalassemia). Sixteen of 20 (80%) had abnormal ECGs, 7 (35%) had transient ST-T wave changes, and 3 (15%) had persistent ST-T wave changes, both consistent with ischemia; 6 (30%) had nonspecific ST-T changes, and 4 (20%) had normal tracings. Serum enzymes (CK, SGOT, LDH) were abnormal in 16 of 19 (84%); 1 had CK-MB detected, (5%) and 1 had LDH1 to LDH2 reversal. All 10 Tc-99m pyrophosphate scans performed were negative; 4 of 6 (66%) thallium-201 scans had focal defects, and 5 of 8 (63%) radionuclide angiograms (MUGAs) had focal wall motion abnormalities. Three of 8 (38%) MUGAs showed cardiac dilation, diffuse hypokinesis, and reduced ejection fractions. Thus, myocardial damage may be a potentially serious complication of patients with sickle cell anemia who present with chest pain during painful crises. Studies are indicated to define the significance and pathophysiology of these observations.
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PMID:Sickle cell anemia: does myocardial ischemia occur during crisis? 203 80

Many renal structural and functional abnormalities have been associated with sickle cell disease. The patients have an impaired urinary concentrating ability but an intact diluting capacity. There are defects in both urinary acidification and potassium excretion, although overt metabolic acidosis and hyperkalemia occur infrequently. Proximal tubular function is supranormal, as manifested by increased reabsorption of phosphate and increased secretion of creatinine. The former results in mild hyperphosphatemia, while the latter causes substantial overestimation of the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) by creatinine clearance. Both GFR and renal plasma flow are increased in young patients with sickle cell disease, but prostaglandin inhibitors decrease the GFR. The GFR progressively decreases with increasing age. Proteinuria, and even nephrotic syndrome, are relatively frequent; the most common renal lesion in children is focal glomerular sclerosis, which may be associated with progressive deterioration in renal function. Glomerular hyperfiltration has been implicated in the pathogenesis of the glomerular lesions, as well as in the development of renal failure. In patients with end-stage renal disease, both hemodialysis and kidney transplantation have been successful. Recurrent hematuria is a relatively common problem in patients with sickle cell disease. The bleeding usually remits spontaneously, but occasionally requires therapy with aminocaproic acid. Papillary necrosis may occur, and is thought to result from medullary ischemia.
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PMID:Renal abnormalities in sickle cell disease. 217 77

More than a dozen primary hematologic disorders have been associated with ischemic stroke. Inherited deficiencies of antithrombin III, protein C, and protein S have been linked with stroke in case reports; optimal screening requires functional as well as antigenic assays. Antiphospholipid antibodies and lupus anticoagulants are the most frequently identified acquired states associated with ischemic stroke. Polycythemia vera, sickle cell anemia, sickle-C disease, and essential thrombocythemia are the major disorders of formed blood elements causing stroke. Special, step-wise screening for occult prothrombotic entities in stroke patients is recommended for young persons with stroke of uncertain cause, for those with prior venous thrombosis, for those with a family history of unusual thrombosis, and for those with no other explanation for recurrent stroke. Acquired, perhaps transient, abnormalities of platelets, coagulation inhibition, and fibrinolysis may contribute importantly to brain ischemia in synergy with other mechanisms, but at present these remain ill-defined. The contribution of prothrombotic diatheses to stroke is probably underrecognized and warrants further investigation.
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PMID:Hematologic disorders and ischemic stroke. A selective review. 186 63

Anterior segment ischemia (ASI) is a dreaded complication of retinal detachment surgery particularly in patients with predisposing factors such as sickle cell disease. We report a case of ASI after scleral buckling in an otherwise healthy black patient with sickle cell trait. Conditions of relative hypoxia intraoperatively from either anesthesia or surgical manipulation may precipitate vasoocclusive phenomena in these normally asymptomatic patients. Since the incidence of sickle cell trait in the black population in the United States is 8.5%, we recommend these patients have a preoperative sickle test followed by hemoglobin electrophoresis with quantification if positive. The presence of sickle cell trait should alert the surgeon to the risk of ASI, and factors predisposing to hypoxia should be minimized when possible.
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PMID:Anterior segment ischemia: a complication of retinal detachment repair in a patient with sickle cell trait. 224 89

Disorders of hemoglobin synthesis affect the musculoskeletal system by either causing replacement of bone by hematopoietic tissue, precipitating bone and soft tissue ischemia and necrosis, or a combination of both processes. Less frequently, joints are involved by synovial ischemia, synovial deposition of iron, or microfracture of subchondral bone. Osteopenia is a significant problem in both thalassemia and sickle cell anemia and may result in vertebral and long bone fractures. Growth disturbances are frequently seen but are not often appreciated until adolescence because of improved hematologic management. The cause of the growth problems is multifactorial and may be related to hormonal deficiencies, iron overload, hypoxia, or local trauma to the growth plate secondary to significant osteopenia.
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PMID:Musculoskeletal problems in hemoglobinopathy. 229 57

With the technique of laser-Doppler velocimetry, cutaneous blood flows in the forearm of patients with stable sickle cell disease after graded periods of proximal ischemia were compared with normal subjects matched for age, race, and sex, and with patients with anemia caused by beta(+)-thalassemia. In the sickle cell patients the reactive hyperemia was characterized by an increased time interval between the release of the occlusion and the peak amplitude response (time-to-peak) and by a greater period of blood flow above the base-line value (payback ratio) compared with controls. In addition, prolongation of the occlusion period led to an augmentation in the magnitude of the characteristic basal flow oscillations or an induction of this phenomenon at sites not exhibiting it before ischemia. Base-line or ischemia-provoked flow oscillations of either this magnitude or frequency were only observed in normal or thalassemic controls during brief intervals in the rapidly decaying portion of the hyperemic response and in one subject with homozygous hemoglobin C disease. These results would support a model of a local integrative control of microcirculatory blood flow, which appears to become augmented, synchronized, and sustained in sickle cell subjects.
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PMID:Microcirculatory adaptations in sickle cell anemia: reactive hyperemia response. 240 12

We obtained electroretinograms (ERGs) from normal subjects and from patients with sickle cell disease. The ERG components (a-wave, b-wave, and oscillatory potentials) obtained from normal subjects and patients without peripheral retinal neovascularization did not differ in either amplitude or implicit time. However, ERG components obtained from patients with peripheral retinal neovascularization were reduced in amplitude compared with those obtained from normal subjects or patients without neovascularization. The reduced a-wave, b-wave, and oscillatory potential amplitudes may have been due to photoreceptor dysfunction secondary to choroidal ischemia or possibly increased oxygen demands by the inner retina. Ischemia of the inner retina may also have contributed to the altered b-wave and oscillatory potentials. These results suggest that ERG provides a means of assessing the consequence of peripheral retinal ischemia to retinal cell function and could be of value in monitoring patients with sickle cell disease for the development of clinically significant peripheral retinal neovascularization.
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PMID:Electroretinographic findings in sickle cell retinopathy. 244 Apr 19

The role of the inflammatory process in the onset of sickle cell crisis has not been fully elucidated, although there is evidence for leukocytosis and enhanced leukocyte to endothelium adhesion. The elevated LEA typical of inflammation may impede recovery from transient ischemic episodes by increasing the resistance to blood flow, which in the case of sickle cell disease may exacerbate the "vicious cycle" of HbS deoxygenation which leads to microvascular stasis. Recent studies on the mechanics of white blood cell margination and adhesion in postcapillary venules of laboratory animals, either in the low-flow state or following tissue exposure to chemoattractants, reveal a marked rise in intravascular resistance with LEA. Such increases may be as great as twofold with as few as 6 WBCs adhering per 100 microns of venule length. In human subjects, leukocytosis attendant to crisis has been correlated with increased time to recover from induced periods of ischemia in skin capillaries. Thus, further definition of the role of the inflammatory process in crisis is needed in light of microvessel obstruction in the low-flow state.
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PMID:Role of leukocyte-endothelium adhesion in affecting recovery from ischemic episodes. 247 65

Ischemic necrosis of bone is believed to occur exclusively in areas of predominantly fatty marrow. Sickle cell disease is unusual in that marrow infarction occurs in areas of active hematopoiesis. MR images of long bone obtained in ten patients with sickle cell anemia (SCA) were analyzed to correlate the distribution and appearance of marrow infarction with the type of marrow. While the hematopoietic marrow predominated in metaphyseal and diaphyseal regions of femurs and tibias, the fatty or mixed marrow was the most common pattern in epiphyses. Infarcts occurred in fatty as well as hematopoietic marrow. Marrow infarcts were isointense or minimally hyperintense on T1 weighted images with the hematopoietic marrow and therefore difficult to detect. On T2 weighted images, the infarcts showed very high signal. T2 weighted images are essential for detection of marrow infarction. Soft tissue changes seen as low signal on T1 and high signal on T2, may be secondary to intramuscular injections of analgesics or muscle ischemia occurring during sickle crisis.
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PMID:Marrow infarction in sickle cell anemia: correlation with marrow type and distribution by MRI. 291 17


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