Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019045 (hemoglobinopathies)
2,704 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hemoglobin SD-Los Angeles is an uncommon sickle hemoglobinopathy. We describe a boy with documented Hb SD-Los Angeles who had experienced acute splenic sequestration, pneumococcal sepsis, aplastic crisis and functional asplenia during his first two years of life. We suggest that children with Hb SD-Los Angeles are at similar risks for the life-threatening complications which characterize sickle cell anemia and should receive the same comprehensive medical care currently recommended for children with Hb SS disease.
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PMID:Life-threatening complications in a child with hemoglobin SD-Los Angeles disease. 654 33

Fifty of 52 infants with cord blood hemoglobin electrophoresis patterns indicative of a possible sickling hemoglobinopathy (SH) were followed up prospectively. A retrospective group of 39 children whose mothers were contacted two to four years after the birth of a child with a positive newborn screening test formed a comparison group. During an average follow-up period of 30 months, children of mothers who were informed early of a positive cord blood test were hospitalized more readily for complications of an SH. During this same period, five (6%) of 88 infants with fetal and sickle hemoglobin (FS) or fetal, sickle, and C hemoglobins (FSC) in their cord blood died, all before 6 months of age. All five deaths occurred in infants whose parents were unaware of their child's disease; four of the five deaths may have been caused by sepsis. These results alone did not prove that screening significantly reduces mortality but did show that newborn screening increases parental awareness of complications and may, therefore, improve the prognosis in sickle cell disease in infancy.
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PMID:Newborn screening for sickling hemoglobinopathies. Houston, 1976 to 1980. 669 13

Our experience at the Ramathibodi Hospital with 20 infants and children who had Aeromonas septicemia is reviewed. Their ages were from 1 day to 14 years. Eighteen patients had underlying diseases: leukemia, 5; aplastic anemia, 4; cirrhosis, 2; thalassemia/hemoglobinopathy, 3; renal failure, 1; ileal perforation, 1; marasmus, 1; and cavernous hemangioma with thrombocytopenia, 1. Blood cultures yielded Aeromonas hydrophila in all patients, and four patients had polymicrobial bacteremia. Fifteen episodes of septicemia were community-acquired and five were hospital-acquired. The clinical manifestations of these patients were similar to septicemia due to other Gram-negative enteric bacilli. Two patients each had ecthyma gangrenosum, necrotizing fasciitis and meningitis. Antibiotic treatment included penicillins, cephalosporins, aminoglycosides and sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim. The overall case fatality rate was 50%; eight of the nine patients with acute leukemia or aplastic anemia died. With the exception of one child the blood cultures were sterile in all patients before death. Aeromonas septicemia is an uncommon but severe infection which occurs predominantly in compromised hosts.
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PMID:Aeromonas septicemia in infants and children. 672 2

To estimate the frequency of bacteremia in children with sickle cell hemoglobinopathies (SCHs) and to evaluate the usefulness of various findings in predicting septicemia, we reviewed the charts of 153 patients with SCH who made 326 emergency department visits in a one-year period. Ninety children were febrile (greater than 38.0 degrees C). Four children, three of whom were 2 years old or younger, were bacteremic with Streptococcus pneumoniae. A temperature greater than 40 degrees C occurred in three of the four and was more common than in those who had sterile blood cultures. Two of the five patients who were 2 years old or younger and who had the combination of a WBC count of 20,000/cu mm or more and a temperature of 39.5 degrees C or higher were bacteremic. These children were significantly more likely to have bacteremia than those with lower temperatures and WBC counts.
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PMID:Fever in children with sickle cell hemoglobinopathies. 714 63

The incidence of functional asplenia in sickle-hemoglobin C (SC) disease has not been defined, and the use of prophylactic penicillin to prevent life-threatening septicemia in this disorder is controversial. The percentage of red blood cells with pits (pit count) is a reliable assay of splenic function in other disorders but has not been validated in hemoglobin SC disease. To address these issues, we conducted a prospective, multicenter study of splenic function in persons with hemoglobin SC disease. Baseline clinical data were recorded, and red blood cell pit counts were performed on 201 subjects, aged 6 months to 90 years, with hemoglobin SC; 43 subjects underwent radionuclide liver-spleen scanning. Pit counts greater than 20% were associated with functional asplenia as assessed by liver-spleen scan, whereas pit counts less than 20% were found in subjects with preserved splenic function. Pit counts greater than 20% were present in 0 of 59 subjects (0%) less than 4 years of age, in 19 of 86 subjects (22%) 4 to 12 years of age, and in 25 of 56 subjects (45%) greater than 12 years of age. Other subjects with hemoglobin SC, who had previously undergone surgical splenectomy, had higher pit counts (59.7% +/- 9.5%) than splenectomized subjects without hemoglobinopathy (38.5% +/- 8.8%) or with sickle cell anemia (20.5% +/- 1.9%; P < .001). Two subjects with hemoglobin SC disease (not splenectomized), ages 14 and 15 years, with pit counts of 40.3% and 41.7% died from pneumococcal septicemia. These data indicate that functional asplenia occurs in many patients with hemoglobin SC disease, but its development is usually delayed until after 4 years of age. The pit count is a reliable measure of splenic function in hemoglobin SC disease, but values indicative of functional asplenia (> 20% in our laboratory) are higher than in other disorders. The routine administration of prophylactic penicillin to infants and young children with hemoglobin SC disease may not be necessary.
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PMID:Functional asplenia in hemoglobin SC disease. 771 96

Osteonecrosis secondary to sickle cell anemia and its genetic variants has many presentations depending on the age of onset and the extent of femoral head involvement. Total hip arthroplasty provides the greatest opportunity for clinical improvement of all treatment options, though early and late complication rates are high. Technical difficulties of total hip arthroplasty are related to marrow hyperplasia and the presence of sclerotic intramedullary bone. Surgical complications related to sickle cell hemoglobinopathy include vaso-occlusive crises, congestive heart failure, major transfusion reactions, intraoperative femoral fracture, femoral perforation, late aseptic loosening of acetabular and femoral components, and sepsis.
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PMID:Osteonecrosis of the hip in sickle cell hemoglobinopathy. 777 53

The patient first noticed general muscle stiffness at the age of 36. Two years later, she suffered from a tonic-clonic seizure which brought her to a hospital for the first time. Choreoathetoid movement, ataxia and cognitive deficit were apparent. At the age of 44, tonic-clonic seizures became more frequent and she was admitted to our hospital as being status epilepticus. After the cessation of clinical seizures, she became appllic. Gradual increase of atrophic changes in cerebrum, cerebellum and brain stem were observed by MRI and CT. Hematological study showed that she had abnormal hemoglobin, Hb Takamatsu. Four of her five children were clinically examined; all of them showed abnormal EEG findings; three being mentally retarded and had clinical generalized convulsive seizures; two had hemoglobinopathy (Hb Takamatsu). The patient died from sepsis at the age of 50 and the autopsy was carried out. The brain weighed 930 gram. Histological findings confirmed the diagnosis of dentato-rubro-pallido-luysian atrophy; neuronal loss accompanied by gliosis in dentate nuclei, red nuclei, lateral part of globus pallidus, and subthalamic nuclei. The coincidence of the hereditary traits of two independent diseases, DRPLA and familial hemoglobinopathy (Hb Takamatsu) suggests closeness of their genetic loci.
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PMID:[A familial case of DRPLA diagnosed by an autopsy associated with hemoglobinopathy (Hb Takamatsu)]. 825 33

Four children with major sickle hemoglobinopathies developed severe pneumococcal infection. Three had sickle cell hemoglobin C (Hb SC) disease and one had sickle cell anemia (Hb SS). In three instances, there was a fatal outcome. The authors' experience with these cases leads them to question whether any patient with a major sickle hemoglobinopathy should be excluded from receiving prophylactic penicillin or if outpatient management with long-acting cephalosporin treatment in the sickle cell patient with suspected sepsis is appropriate therapy.
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PMID:Infection in major sickle hemoglobinopathies: should management strategies change? 825 43

Twenty-two arthroplasties were performed in 14 patients with sickle cell hemoglobinopathy (SCH). There were 15 primary and seven revision procedures; none were lost to follow-up evaluation. In the primary arthroplasty group, there were two deaths in patients whose implants were functioning well. The remaining 13 hips had a mean follow-up period of 4.8 years. Failure occurred in five of these 13 hips (38%), four due to aseptic acetabular loosening and one due to sepsis. In the revision arthroplasty group, at a mean follow-up period of 5.3 years, failure occurred in three hips (43%), one due to acetabular loosening, one due to femoral loosening, and one due to sepsis. Perioperative complication rates were high in both groups. Femoral intramedullary sclerosis and bone altered by marrow hyperplasia were associated with intraoperative technical difficulties as well as problems with achieving long-term component fixation. Though total hip arthroplasty provides the most reliable measure of effective treatment in SCH, it carries a high risk of complications and failure.
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PMID:Total hip arthroplasty in sickle cell hemoglobinopathy. 835 6

Hemoglobin S/O(Arab) (Hb S/O(Arab)) is a rare compound heterozygous hemoglobinopathy characterized by the presence of two variant beta-globin chains: beta6Glu --> Val (Hb S) and beta121Glu --> Lys (Hb O(Arab)). The diagnosis of Hb S/O(Arab) requires electrophoresis on both cellulose acetate and citrate agar, since Hb O(Arab) co-migrates with Hb C at alkaline pH and close to Hb S at acidic pH. To date only case reports and small series of patients with Hb S/O(Arab) have been described. To better characterize the clinical and laboratory aspects of this unusual disorder, we reviewed the Duke University Medical Center experience. We identified 13 African-American children and adults with Hb S/O(Arab) ranging in age from 2.7 to 62.5 years. All patients had hemolytic anemia with a median Hb of 8.7 gm/dL (range 6.1-9.9 gm/dL), and a median reticulocyte count of 5.8% (range 1.2-10.3%). The peripheral blood smear typically showed sickled erythrocytes, target cells, polychromasia, and nucleated red blood cells. All 13 patients have had significant clinical sickling events including acute chest syndrome (11), recurrent vasoocclusive painful events (10), dactylitis (7), gallstones (5), nephropathy (4), aplastic crises (2), avascular necrosis (2), leg ulcers (2), cerebrovascular accident (CVA) (1), osteomyelitis (1), and retinopathy (1). Four patients have died, including two from pneumococcal sepsis/meningitis at ages 5 and 10 years, one of acute chest syndrome at age 14 years, and one of multiorgan failure at age 35 years. We conclude that Hb S/O(Arab) disease is a severe sickling hemoglobinopathy with laboratory and clinical manifestations similar to those of homozygous sickle cell anemia.
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PMID:Hemoglobin S/O(Arab): thirteen new cases and review of the literature. 1020 1


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