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Query: UMLS:C0002895 (
sickle cell disease
)
11,747
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although the issue of folate supplementation in
sickle cell anemia
remains controversial, routine supplementation has become common. The major drawback to indiscriminate folate therapy is the potential of masking findings of vitamin
B12
(cobalamin) deficiency. This has been dismissed as a problem in
sickle cell anemia
because of the generally young age of the patients. However, because young blacks, especially women, are at higher risk for developing pernicious anemia than whites,
sickle cell anemia
and pernicious anemia can be expected to coexist occasionally. In this article we describe such a patient and recommend that routine folate supplementation should not be given in
sickle cell anemia
before determining the vitamin
B12
status.
...
PMID:Unsuspected pernicious anemia in a patient with sickle cell disease receiving routine folate supplementation. 366 11
To establish the prevalence of anaemia in pregnant women in Mozambique and to determine the locally most important causes of the disease, 881 pregnant women were examined at nine sites in seven of Mozambique's 10 provinces. In Maputo, the capital city, an additional 91 anaemic gravidae were compared to 207 parturients chosen at random. The study comprised interviews, and clinical and laboratory investigations. Between 5 and 15% of the pregnant women at the different sites had haemoglobin (Hb) values below 90 g/l and 58% had levels below 110 g/l. Inspection of mucosal membranes detected almost all the anaemic women with Hb values below 80 g/l. Nulliparous women were more prone to be anaemic. Iron deficiency and malaria were the main causes of anaemia, with malnutrition also contributing. Occasional cases of folic acid deficiency were found among severely anaemic women but no cases of significant deficiency of vitamin
B12
were encountered.
Sickle cell disease
was not found to contribute significantly to anaemia of pregnancy in Mozambique. The mean corpuscular haemoglobin concentration (MCHC) proved more sensitive, under these conditions, than serum ferritin in detecting iron deficiency in anaemic women. Packed cell volume (PCV) analysis may substitute Hb analysis when screening for pregnancy anaemia in Mozambique.
...
PMID:Anaemia of pregnancy in Mozambique. 378 85
The unsaturated vitamin
B12
binding capacity (UBBC) of serum, the three transcobalamins (TC I, TC II, TC III), and the total leucocyte and neutrophil counts have been studied in paediatric patients with
sickle cell disease
(
SCD
). Increase in the level of the binding capacities of TC I and TC II with concomitant increase of UBBC was observed in these children who also had increased total white blood and neutrophil counts. There was a significant reduction in the level of endogenous
B12
. These abnormalities are discussed in relation to the deficiency of the splenic reticuloendothelial function, immunologic defect, hepatic degenerative changes and aplastic crisis observed in
SCD
. These results lend support to the view that transcobalamins are involved in the defence mechanism of the body. The significant reduction in serum cobalamin in
SCD
suggests a higher demand on this vitamin for metabolic functions, especially for the sparing of folate.
...
PMID:Abnormalities of serum transcobalamins in sickle cell disease (HbSS) in Black Africa. 630 Sep 91
Erythropoietin (ESF) titers were determined in sera from patients with different types of anemia using the fetal mouse liver cell bioassay. An inverse relationship was found between hemoglobin concentration and ESF titer. However, ESF titers differed markedly between patients at comparable degrees of anemia. Several groups of patients were distinguished on the basis of the activity of their erythroid bone marrow. In each of these groups, a significant negative correlation was found between the hemoglobin concentration and the logarithm of the ESF titer. ESF titers in patients with pure red cell aplasia were fourfold higher than those in patients with iron-deficiency anemia and tenfold higher than those in patients with megaloblastic anemia and homozygous
sickle cell anemia
at comparable hemoglobin concentrations. Following the initiation of specific therapy in patients with pernicious anemia and patients wit iron-deficiency anemia, serum ESF titers were found to decrease prior to any substantial rise in hemoglobin concentrations. In the patients with pernicious anemia, the lowest ESF levels were found 1 day after administration of vitamin
B12
, whereas in the patients with iron-deficiency anemia, the lowest ESF levels were reached in the second week of oral iron therapy. ON the basis of these data it was concluded that serum ESF titers in anemic patients are not only inversely related to the hemoglobin concentration but also to the activity of the erythroid bone marrow.
...
PMID:Serum erythropoietin (EST) titers in anemia. 730 4
Protein energy malnutrition (PEM) is common in underprivileged populations in many parts of the world and results from diets deficient in protein (kwashiorkor) or protein and calories (marasmus). The literature documents renal tubular abnormalities in children with PEM. In PEM the reabsorption of amino acids and phosphate is defective. In many kidney disorders in which renal tubular function is impaired (e.g., diabetes, preeclampsia, nephrotic syndrome,
sickle cell anemia
), lysosomal enzymuria ensues. We compared the urinary excretion of the following five lysosomal enzymes in 31 Nigerian children with marasmus, kwashiorkor, or marasmic-kwashiorkor: beta-hexosaminidase, alpha-galactosidase, beta-galactosidase, beta-glucuronidase, and alpha-mannosidase. All of the protein energy malnourished children and the 18 age- and gender-matched controls were from the city of Jos, located in central Nigeria. In the severely malnourished children, the urine levels of all five lysosomal enzymes (expressed as units of enzyme activity per mg creatinine) were markedly increased. The greatest increases were seen with beta-hexosaminidase (16-fold) and beta-glucuronidase (14-fold). Routine clinical analyses also revealed that, relative to the control population, the sera of the 14 most severely malnourished patients contained 2- to 5-fold more vitamin
B12
and markedly reduced levels (15%, p < 0.00001) of calcium. These data are significant in that they document lysosomal enzymuria in Nigerian children with severe PEM and point to the potential diagnostic utility of the urinary beta-galactosidase determination for assessing renal function in children with this disorder.
...
PMID:Lysosomal enzymuria in protein energy malnutrition. 948 33
We investigated whether pediatric patients with
sickle cell disease
(
SCD
) (9 +/- 4 years; 27 homozygous
SCD
[HbSS]; 19 sickle-C disease [HbSC]) have different folate status compared with age-, sex-, and race-matched normal hemoglobin (HbAA) controls (n = 20), and whether their folate status can be improved by folate supplementation. The patients were supplemented with vitamins B6 and
B12
during one week and with folate during the following week. Circulating folate, homocysteine, vitamin B6 and vitamin
B12
levels were measured at baseline (patients and controls), after one week and after two weeks (patients). The patients had similar folate, vitamin B6, and vitamin
B12
, but higher homocysteine levels compared with HbAA controls (12.7 +/- 4.5 vs. 10.9 +/- 3.5 micromol/l; P = 0.04). Vitamin B6 and
B12
supplementation did not change their homocysteine levels, but folate supplementation caused a 53% reduction (to 5.7 +/- 1.6). We conclude that patients with
SCD
have adequate vitamin B6 and
B12
status, but suboptimal folate status, leading to elevated plasma homocysteine levels. They may therefore benefit from folate supplementation to reduce their high risk for endothelial damage.
...
PMID:Elevated homocysteine levels indicate suboptimal folate status in pediatric sickle cell patients. 979 56
Erythrocyte deformability was determined in more than 500 clinical samples, and was found to be elevated in conditions in which fetal-like red cells are produced: aplastic anemia (3/3 cases), myelodysplastic syndromes, polycythemias,
sickle cell anemia
during treatment with hydroxyurea, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, and recovery from
B12
deficiency. Elevated deformability was observed in neonatal erythrocytes, and during recovery from transient erythroblastopenia of childhood, when fetal-like red cells are known to be produced. Increased deformability appears to be a feature of fetal and fetal-like red cells. Forty-eight cases of enzymatically verified glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-PD) deficiency were also examined. Thirty out of 32 G-6-PD(A-) individuals, including both heterozygotes and hemizygotes, exhibited increased deformability during the steady state. In contrast, G-6-PD(Med) hemizygotes had normal deformability. Increased deformability was also found in G-6-PD(Huron) (n=3), G-6-PD(Wayne) (n=4), triose phosphate isomerase deficiency (n=2), and pyruvate kinase deficiency (n=2). An elevated osmoscan was found in more than 90% of female G-6-PD heterozygotes, affording a simple screening test for heterozygotes. Deformability remained high during hemolytic episodes, when older enzyme deficient cells are removed from the circulation. In four cases of G-6-PD deficiency with normal deformability, evidence for co-existing hereditary spherocytosis was found. The combination of conditions with opposing effects on deformability resulted in nearly normal deformability. Because increased red cell deformability is a feature of fetal erythrocytes, these results suggest that the red cells in many cases of glycolytic enzyme deficiency are fetal-like.
...
PMID:Increased erythrocyte deformability in fetal erythropoiesis and in erythrocytes deficient in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and other glycolytic enzymes. 989 Jun 17
We report three cases of peripheral neuropathy in patients with
sickle cell disease
. All had a history of frequent painful crises and regular attendance at our Accident and Emergency department where nitrous oxide analgesia was administered for prolonged periods. All three patients (one male and two females) presented with difficulty in walking associated with paraesthesiae, and neurological examination revealed signs compatible with a peripheral sensorimotor neuropathy, later confirmed by nerve conduction studies. Serum vitamin
B12
levels were mildly reduced in two patients and very low in one patient (< 10 ng/l). Haemoglobin levels in all the patients were unchanged compared with their steady-state levels but one had developed a macrocytosis (103 fl). Schilling tests were normal in two patients, and two patients had negative gastric parietal antibodies. All three patients were given intramuscular vitamin
B12
in addition to avoiding further exposure to nitrous oxide, and their neurological symptoms improved completely. As nitrous oxide is known to cause a neuropathy similar to that seen in pernicious anaemia, we postulate that nitrous oxide analgesia combined with low
B12
levels was the cause of the marked neuropathy in these patients. As a result of our observations and the probable association, we now do not use nitrous oxide analgesia in the management of patients with
sickle cell disease
.
...
PMID:Sickle cell disease and nitrous oxide-induced neuropathy. 1067 96
About 7% of the adult population has subclinical cobalamin (
B12
) deficiency. Subjects with
sickle cell disease
(
SCD
) may be at higher risk of cobalamin deficiency because of increased demand, inadequate supply, coexisting folate deficiency or malabsorption. We compared the clinical and laboratory characteristics of low serum cobalamin levels in patients with
SCD
with those patients without this hemoglobinopathy (non-
SCD
). Between 1993 and 2003, 105
SCD
patients and 112 non-
SCD
patients who had serum cobalamin measurements were identified at our institution. The mean cobalamin level in
SCD
patients was significantly lower (496 +/- 352 pg/ml) than that in patients without
SCD
(869 +/- 660 pg/ml, p<0.0001). The frequency of low cobalamin levels, defined by a serum cobalamin level of <200 pg/ml, was 18.1% (19/105) and 9.8% (11/112) in
SCD
and non-
SCD
patients, respectively (chi2=3.11, nonsignificant). The mean age of the low-cobalamin
SCD
and non-
SCD
patients was 28.1 and 62.9, respectively, and their male:female ratios were 11:8 in
SCD
patients and 2:9 in non-
SCD
patients. None of the
SCD
patients had neurological manifestations, but nine of the 11 non-
SCD
low-cobalamin level patients did. The proportion of
SCD
patients with unexplained low cobalamin levels (13/19) was higher than that in non-
SCD
patients (4/11, chi2=2.92, nonsignificant) Our data suggest that cobalamin levels are lower in
SCD
patients than in subjects without
SCD
, and low-cobalamin
SCD
patients are younger and more likely to be males.
...
PMID:Low cobalamin levels in African Americans with and without sickle cell disease. 1657 98
A 43 year old female
sickle cell anaemia
patient who had a mild clinical course of the disease developed ascending paralysis, areflexia, sensory disturbance and bulbar affectation while on therapy with vitamin
B12
for neurological complications of megalobalstic anaemia. She had initially presented with a history of paresthesia involving all extremities and moderate pain in both feet. Blood smear picture revealed macro-ovalocytosis and hyper-segmented neutrophils. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis revealed protein of >200mg %, WBC <5/mm3-predominatly lymphocytes and was negative for cytology and Gram stain. This is the first case report of Guillain- Barre syndrome in a
sickle cell anaemia
patient.
...
PMID:Guillain-Barre syndrome in a haemoglobin S patient. 1674 46
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