Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0039730 (
thalassemia
)
10,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Progressive tissue iron deposition from multiple blood transfusions is common in beta-
thalassaemia
and pulmonary iron deposition may result in parenchymal damage. The objectives of this study were to: 1) determine the predominant pulmonary dysfunction in patients with
thalassaemia
major; and 2) demonstrate that parenchymal disease, if present, is at the level of the alveolocapillary membrane. Fourteen
thalassaemia
major patients (13 nonsmokers) receiving regular blood transfusion and without any history of chronic respiratory disease were recruited. Pulmonary function tests and echocardiography were performed before the scheduled transfusions. Three patients with the most restricted lung function were selected for high resolution computerized tomography (CT) of the lungs. One patient had an obstructive pattern with a forced expiratory volume in one second as percentage of forced vital capacity (FEV1/FVC) of 71%. Four patients demonstrated a restrictive pattern, as defined by total lung capacity (TLC) less than 80% predicted with normal FEV1/FVC%. Twelve patients had pulmonary transfer factors for carbon monoxide (TL,CO) below 80% pred, even after correction for the anaemia, indicating parenchymal disease. Eight of these 12 patients had alveolocapillary membrane defect, as demonstrated by a gas transfer factor of the pulmonary membrane (Tm) less than 80% pred. Mean resting arterial oxygen saturation was 95 +/- 2 (range 92-98) %. Eleven patients had oxygen desaturation of 5% or more during exercise on a bicycle ergometer, consistent with interstitial lung disease. There was no clinical or echocardiographic evidence of
heart failure
. Percentage predicted TLC was inversely correlated with age (r = -0.547; p = 0.043). Both percentage predicted TLC and TL,CO were not correlated with iron burden or desferoxamine ratio. High resolution CT in the three selected patients showed no evidence of pulmonary fibrosis. We conclude that
thalassaemia
major patients have a predominant restrictive lung dysfunction with pulmonary parenchymal disease and alveolocapillary membrane block. The restrictive and interstitial lung disease could not be accounted for by iron loading or pulmonary fibrosis in our patients.
...
PMID:Lungs in thalassaemia major patients receiving regular transfusion. 883 48
Few reports exist concerning heart transplantation in recipients with end-stage myocardiopathy-associated
heart failure
caused by iron overload occurring with beta-
thalassaemia
, Diamond-Blackfan syndrome or haemochromatosis. Seven potential transplant candidates (six male, one female, mean age 26 years) with such
heart failure
, following desferrioxamine application subcutaneously over a number of years, and intravenously during their hospitalization before transplantation, were retrospectively analysed. Five were New York Heart Association (NYHA) class IV, three experienced one or more resuscitations immediately before transplantation could be performed. Continuous, high-volume, veno-venous haemofiltration was necessary in two patients. One of these two candidates additionally had to be bridged, first with a right ventricular, then with a biventricular assist device. Five of the seven patients survived, two with haemochromatosis, one with beta-
thalassaemia
major and one with Diamond-Blackfan syndrome following transplantation. One non-transplanted candidate with beta-
thalassaemia
major has been recompensated for 5 years. Survival was 14-74 months. Our results demonstrate the feasibility and indication of transplantation in patients with such
heart failure
and the satisfying outcome of immunosuppression is described.
...
PMID:Heart transplantation for end-stage heart failure caused by iron overload. 916 90
Patients with homozygous beta-
thalassemia
are chronically transfused and, if not assiduously chelated, are at risk for cardiac dysfunction. Available data suggest that even in optimally chelated patients, cardiac pathology is abnormal secondary to iron deposition, fibrosis, hypertrophy, and the structural effects of chronic anemia. Evidence of myopericarditis may also be found. Cardiac performance is usually only subtly affected, primarily with diastolic abnormalities not routinely detected on echocardiograms or nuclear scan. In poorly chelated patients, severe
heart failure
occurs and is easily predictable but invariably fatal, despite treatment with diuretics, vasodilators, inotropes, and antiarrhythmics. Based on successful prevention of
heart failure
with ACE inhibitors in other forms of cardiomyopathy, we suggest multicenter trials to explore methods to stabilize cardiac function in patients at risk for iron-induced heart disease. Long-term adverse effects of iron deposition, diastolic dysfunction, and abnormal hormone regulation need to be quantitated in patients reaching their third and fourth decades when the potential for ischemic cardiac disease could compound cardiac dysfunction.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and management of iron-induced heart disease in Cooley's anemia. 966 46
In homozygous beta-
thalassemia
, the organ damage is mainly attributed to excessive iron deposition through the formation of oxygen free radicals. Despite appropriate transfusion and chelation therapy and low ferritin levels, patients still develop organ failure,
heart failure
being the main cause of death. This study was designed to determine whether the decreased antioxidant activity of the apolipoprotein E (APOE) 4 allele could represent a genetic risk factor for the development of left ventricular failure (LVF) in beta-
thalassemia
homozygotes. A total of 251 Greek beta-
thalassemia
homozygotes were studied. Patients were divided in three groups: group A (n = 151) with no cardiac impairment, group C (n = 47) with LVF, and 53 patients with LV dilatation and normal LV systolic function constituted the group B. DNA was obtained from all patients, and the polymerase chain reaction was used to analyze the polymorphism at the APOE locus. The APOE allele frequencies were compared with those of a Greek control sample of 216 healthy blood donors. Patients with no cardiac impairment had an APOE 4 allele frequency (7.9%) not different from population controls (6.5%, P > .05), while patients with LVF had a significantly higher frequency of APOE 4 (12.8%) than the controls (P < .05, odds ratio = 2.11, 95% confidence interval 1.03 to 4.32). The APOE 4 allele may represent an important genetic risk factor for the development of organ damage in homozygous beta-
thalassemia
.
...
PMID:Apolipoprotein E epsilon4 allele as a genetic risk factor for left ventricular failure in homozygous beta-thalassemia. 978 87
Iron-induced cardiac disease is the primary cause of death in transfused patients with
thalassaemia
major. The beneficial effects of deferoxamine mesylate on clinical cardiac disease have been well described but the impact of therapy on subclinical cardiac dysfunction is unknown. To assess the reversibility of subclinical cardiac dysfunction we studied the cardiac status during iron depletion treatment (phlebotomy) in iron overloaded patients, cured of
thalassaemia
by marrow transplantation, without clinical manifestation of
heart failure
but with alteration in both left ventricular diastolic function and in contractility property. 32 patients were studied and demonstrated a slight but significant impairment in the morphology and function if compared with matched normal controls. 17 of these patients were submitted to sequential echocardiographic evaluations during the phlebotomy programme. Following completion of the programme, normalization of the indices of contractility and normalization of diastolic function were observed. This study indicates that transplanted
thalassaemia
patients with subclinical left ventricular diastolic dysfunction and impaired left ventricular contractility may reverse these processes with an effective regimen of iron reduction such as phlebotomy.
...
PMID:Evaluation of cardiac status in iron-loaded thalassaemia patients following bone marrow transplantation: improvement in cardiac function during reduction in body iron burden. 988 1
The health background, management and outcomes of 25 pregnancies in 18 women with transfusion dependent beta
thalassaemia
are described with particular consideration of appropriate preconceptual guidance for such women. This is an observation study of women attending three collaborating London hospitals. Nine of the pregnancies required induction of ovulation. Two pregnancies were complicated by diabetes and three by hepatitis C. One patient was hepatitis B positive. Two pregnancies were in women with cardiac problems, one of whom died of
cardiac failure
nine months after delivery of a live child. Two of the pregnancies miscarried and three were terminated, with the others resulting in 21 live children (including one set of twins). 14 of the pregnancies were delivered by caesarean section. After pregnancy five women developed secondary amenorrhoea, two developed cardiac problems and two developed diabetes.
...
PMID:Pregnancy management and outcomes in women with thalassaemia major. 1009 Nov 66
With recent therapeutic advances, thalassemic patients can now reach adulthood and attain reproductive capacity. Endocrine complications due to hemosiderosis and especially hypogonatotropic hypogonadism, which present either with sexual infantilism and primary amenorrhea or with secondary amenorrhea, are common in thalassemic women. The aim of this study was to estimate the frequency of fertility among our female thalassemic patients. Our population included 50 married women with thalassemia major (TM) and 12 with
thalassemia
intermedia (TI) who are regularly followed in our thalassemic centers. Of the 50 patients with TM, 7 had primary amenorrhea (PA), 9 had secondary amenorrhea (SA), and 34 had normal menstrual function (NM), as did all the patients with TI. Overall we had 62 women who were able to achieve 90 pregnancies and give birth to 87 healthy babies. Most of our patients became pregnant around the age of 25 years. Associated endocrine complications were rare except in the group of patients with PA, as expected. In all patients with PA and SA, the 17 pregnancies were induced (intercourse 10, insemination 3, IVF 4). In the patients with NM and TI, 66 pregnancies were achieved spontaneously and 7 following induction (insemination 3, IVF 4). There were four twin and one triple pregnancies, which all resulted in premature deliveries. Among the seven couples in which both partners had thalassemia major, sperm donation was used in 5 cases, ovum donation in one case, and one pregnancy was achieved spontaneously. These 90 pregnancies resulted in 69 full-term, 12 pre-term, 7 abortions and 2 stillbirths. No severe obstetric complication was observed except for two patients with preeclampsia. One patient with PA who carried the triple pregnancy developed severe
cardiac failure
, which was successfully treated. Transfusion requirements were increased during pregnancy. Discontinuation of desferrioxamine resulted in elevation of ferritin levels during the second and third trimesters of pregnancy and after delivery. Nine patients who were examined with cardiac echo had a transient increase of ESD and EDD during pregnancy, with return to normal after delivery. Labor was performed by Caesarian section in 26 births (26%) out of the 81 successful pregnancies. These collected data represent the largest number of pregnancies in thalassemic females reported so far and are clearly encouraging for the ultimate improvement of the quality of life in thalassemic patients.
...
PMID:Fertility in female patients with thalassemia. 1009 Nov 68
Thalassaemia
is a group of genetic diseases where haemoglobin synthesis is impaired. This chronic anaemia leads to increased dietary iron absorption, which develops into iron overload pathology. Treatment through regular transfusions increases oxygen capacity but also provides iron through the red cells' haemoglobin. An essential treatment, in parallel with transfusions, is the use of chelating agents to remove the excess iron deposited in tissues. These deposits are found in the liver, spleen, heart, and pancreas and are associated with
cardiac failure
and diabetes. The deposits in these tissues of patients have been isolated as haemosiderin.
Thalassaemia
patients are particularly at risk of free radical induced damage. Thus, the present study has investigated, as a model system, human cells in vitro in the Comet assay in the presence of free radicals. This assay measures DNA damage, particularly DNA strand breakage. The effects of iron overload on cells oxidatively stressed with hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) have been determined as well as the effect of the chelating agent, deferoxamine. Iron overload was simulated with ferric (FeCl(3)) and ferrous chloride (FeCl(2)), ferrous sulphate (FeSO(4)) and haemosiderins. Both human lymphocytes from a male and a female donor and human adenocarcinoma colonic cells showed an increase in DNA damage in the Comet assay after treatment with H(2)O(2). Ferric chloride produced an increase in DNA damage in human colonic cells, but little or no damage in human lymphocytes. Ferrous chloride also produced weak DNA damage in human lymphocytes, but ferrous sulphate produced a dose-related response. Deferoxamine produced no DNA damage. When H(2)O(2) was combined with FeCl(3), FeCl(2), or FeSO(4), the DNA damage produced was as least as great as or slightly greater than with H(2)O(2) alone. When deferoxamine was combined with H(2)O(2) and FeSO(4) there was a consistent decrease in response. There was little or no decrease in response when deferoxamine was combined with H(2)O(2) and FeCl(3) or FeCl(2), but at high (100-300microm) doses there were changes in the appearance of cellular DNA from Comet tails to dense centres surrounded by a diffuse area. This was probably as a consequence of chelation processes. Haemosiderin produced no damage. The three fractions of haemosiderin examined were of three different densities and from a Thai patient where the oxyhydroxide phase is the ferrihydrite. The colour change was similar to that for FeCl(3), but the level of the ferric ion in the haemosiderin was possibly too low in the sample to produce a response. The next stage is to examine peripheral lymphocytes from thalassaemic patients, with and without chelation therapy, whose cells may be more sensitive to simulated iron overload and to lower levels of haemosiderin. Teratogenesis Carcinog. Mutagen. 20:11-26, 2000.
...
PMID:Effects of iron salts and haemosiderin from a thalassaemia patient on oxygen radical damage as measured in the comet assay. 1060 74
Patients with beta-
thalassaemia
major frequently suffer from hypersiderosis which leads to hemochromatosis of major organs such as the heart and liver. Little information exists about the ultrastructural pathology of the human heart in beta-
thalassaemia
patients. Five Cypriot patients with elevated blood ferritin and intractable
heart failure
were investigated. Cardiac biopsies from these patients were studied by light and electron microscopy, as well as by X-ray microanalysis. Ultrastructural examination revealed the presence of disrupted myocytes showing loss of myofibers, dense nuclei, and a variable number of pleomorphic electron dense granules. These cytoplasmic granules or siderosomes consisted of iron-containing particles as confirmed by X-ray microanalysis. It is likely that the ultrastructural changes observed in myocytes of patients with beta-
thalassaemia
are largely due to iron deposition.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural pathology of the heart in patients with beta-thalassaemia major. 1080 52
Clinical complications of transfusional iron overload are still common in patients with
thalassaemia
major (TM) and it is not clear how best to monitor body iron stores during long-term follow-up to anticipate tissue damage. In this study, we have reviewed a group of 32 patients who underwent liver biopsy between 1984 and 1986. We developed a method of assessing the trend in serum ferritin (TSF) during long-term monitoring and compared this with mean serum ferritin (MSF) and initial liver iron (LI) concentration to determine whether, individually or in combination, they were accurate in predicting clinical outcome. LI levels were low (< 7 mg/g), medium (7-15 mg/g) and high (> 15 mg/g dry weight) in 15, 7 and 10 patients respectively. MSF was low (< 1500 microg/l), medium (1500-2500 microg/l) and high (> 2500 microg/l) in 10, 14 and 8 patients. TSF was low, medium and high risk in 9, 9 and 11 out of 29 evaluable patients. During a median follow-up of 13.6 years (range 2.3-14.8 years) after biopsy, nine patients died and an additional three patients developed
heart failure
. Hypothyroidism developed in five, hypoparathyroidism in four, and diabetes mellitus in seven patients. Cirrhosis developed in four of 10 evaluable patients. The clinical end-point of death or
cardiac failure
was significantly associated with increasing iron load using all three means of assessment. Although numbers were insufficient for statistical analysis, MSF or TSF were more closely associated with complications of iron overload than LI. There was no clear additional value in combining LI with MSF or TSF. The data show that quantitation of liver iron from a single liver biopsy has little value in long-term monitoring of iron stores. Most complications can be avoided if ferritin levels can be brought down to <1500 microg/l.
...
PMID:Hepatic iron concentration combined with long-term monitoring of serum ferritin to predict complications of iron overload in thalassaemia major. 1105 91
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>