Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0039730 (thalassemia)
10,305 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The predictive value of a prolonged glycerol lysis time (GLT50) was assessed by analysis of case records of 100 consecutive subjects with values greater than 73 seconds (normal = 26--73 seconds) reported by the clinical laboratory of The New York Hospital. There were 72 cases of hemoglobinopathy: 65 thalassemia trait, four sickle-thalassemia, and one each of Hb D-thalassemia, sickle-C disease, and sickle-cell anemia. Nine of the remaining subjects had iron-deficiency anemia, three had chronic renal disease, and seven had miscellaneous disorders. Four subjects were apparently normal, and in five cases there was insufficient information for a diagnosis. Of 78 patients who had both a prolonged GLT50 and microcytosis, 67 (86%) had thalassemia trait and seven (9%) had iron-deficiency anemia. In 74 patients with GLT50 greater than 100 seconds, thalassemia trait was found 16 times as often as uncomplicated iron-deficiency anemia. All 31 subjects with GLT50 greater than 180 seconds had hemoglobinopahy. A prolonged GLT50 strongly suggests thalassemia trait, especially when greater than 100 seconds or associated with microcytosis.
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PMID:The diagnostic significance of a prolonged erythrocytic glycerol lysis time (GLT50). 70 32

Hyperuricaemia may complicate thalassaemia and may, on occasion, result in obstruction of urine flow on the basis of crystal formation. Prophylactic therapy with xanthine oxidase inhibitors may prevent this complication, but once it has developed, accurate diagnosis and aggressive therapy can reduce morbidity. The present case report illustrates one approach to the management of acute uric acid nephropathy.
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PMID:Acute uric acid nephropathy in thalassaemia. 111 16

To study the potential of multivariate classification methods in order to obtain more insight into abnormal laboratory data from patients with sickle cell disease, we investigated standard haematological and clinical chemical variables of 18 controls and 37 apparently healthy persons with heterozygous sickle cell disease (Hb AS), all women, using both univariate and multivariate classification methods. In the univariate method, those with Hb AS showed decreased serum log aspartate aminotransferase (log AST) activity, mean corpuscular volume and mean corpuscular haemoglobin (MCH) and increased sodium concentration. The multivariate method identified sodium, potassium, urea, uric acid, log AST, alanine aminotransferase and MCH as the variables that produced maximal separation between persons with Hb As and controls. It increased the 'non-error rate' for classification of persons with Hb AS by 16.4% compared with classification based on the variable, MCH, that produced maximal separation by the univariate method. The frequency distribution of percentage Hb S in the Hb AS group proved bimodal with maximal separation at 37.0% Hb S. The subgroup with 37.0% or less (n = 16) was considered to have concomitant heterozygous alpha-thalassaemia-2. In the univariate method the subgroup characterized by greater than 37.0% Hb S (n = 21) had increased serum sodium and uric acid concentrations, perhaps related to sickle cell nephropathy, whereas the subgroup with less than or equal to 37% Hb S did not. The multivariate method added information to the univariate method by additionally identifying abnormalities in serum potassium and urea concentrations in the former subgroup.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Potential of descriptive linear discriminant analysis for studying clinical chemical and haematological data from persons with heterozygous sickle cell disease. 189 49

The kidney is involved in virtually all individuals who inherit the sickle cell form of hemoglobin. Though asymptomatic and relatively common, proteinuria in patients with sickle cell anemia (SS) over 40 years old is associated with reduced creatinine clearance. The subclinical increase in urinary albumin is termed microalbuminuria and is a marker of preclinical glomerular damage. The aim of the present study was to determine the presence of microalbuminuria measured by radioimmunoassay in patients with sickle cell disease. The study included 41 patients with SS, 11 patients with hemoglobin SC disease, 4 subjects with S beta-thalassemia and 10 normal controls. All subjects were teenagers or adults. Sixteen SS patients (40%) and 1 SC (9%) and 1 S beta (25%) patient presented mean urinary albumin excretion (UAE) above normal values (30 mg/l. No correlation was observed between UAE and age, creatinine clearance, hemoglobin level or %HbF. These parameters, as well as the presence of leg ulcers, were not significantly different between SS patients with and without UAE above 30 mg/dl. The high prevalence of microalbuminuria in patients with sickle cell anemia indicates that glomerular damage is common. The connection between microalbuminuria and clinical nephropathy has been demonstrated in diabetes and may indicate a sign of early disease rather than a marker for susceptibility. Thus, microalbuminuria may be an early indicator of glomerular damage for patients with sickle cell disease.
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PMID:Microalbuminuria in sickle cell disease. 213 17

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is associated with many pathological and functional abnormalities affecting all organ systems. Renal manifestations of SCD may result in end-stage renal disease (ESRD), which can be treated by chronic haemodialysis or renal transplantation. Renal transplantation was successfully performed in a 25-yr-old male with sickle cell beta-thalassaemia and nephrotic syndrome. We present a case report of this patient, a discussion of the renal complications associated with SCD and the perioperative management of a patient with SCD undergoing renal transplantation.
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PMID:Anaesthesia for renal transplantation in sickle cell disease. 222 94

The variable levels of HbF in sickle cell anemia reflect the heterogeneous genetic mix of the beta s-gene-cluster haplotypes and coinheritance of alpha-thalassemia-2 in American SS patients. Clinical severity is less when the level of HbF reaches 20% or 1.2 g/dl or more. The coinheritance of alpha-thalassemia-2 not only increases the intracellular red cell water but modifies the HbF level in accordance with the beta-cluster haplotype. In general, the SS patient with at least one Senegalese haplotype who does not have a CAR haplotype in trans, has a significantly greater probability of maintaining HbF above 20%. This is in part related to the genetic control of the G gamma HbF locus. Such a patient is protected from arteriolar vasculopathy and subsequent major organ destruction. Much of this but perhaps not all of the better health of patients with a Senegalese haplotype can be attributed to the elevation of G gamma HbF. The coinheritance of alpha-thalassemia-2 further decreases the risk of major morbidity of the soft tissues but increases the risk of avascular necrosis of the bony skeleton. Although these heterozygous Senegal patients are healthier, eventually most, in time, will show the deleterious effect of HbS as retinopathy and avascular necrosis usually beginning after age 30 and sickle nephropathy after age 40. Because of the age-specific effect, the onset of the sickle vasculopathy is delayed by nearly 20 years in the Sen/Ben patient with increased G gamma HbF as compared to those with a CAR haplotype or the homozygous Benin. Lifetime elevation of HbF above 20% modifies the severity of disease expression and provides relative protection to the patient with sickle cell anemia.
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PMID:The influence of fetal hemoglobin on the clinical expression of sickle cell anemia. 247 64

Little is known about the behaviour of central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO) in the young. We studied the course and visual outcome in 25 patients with CRVO aged less than 40 years with special reference to the association with underlying systemic disorders. Eight patients had ischaemic CRVO while 17 had non-ischaemic CRVO. Systemic disorders associated with ischaemic CRVO included end-stage renal disease in 3, and hypercholesterolaemia, beta-thalassaemia and hypertension in 1 each. All patients with ischaemic CRVO had unusually severe disease and a rapid downhill course. Management included panretinal photocoagulation in 7 eyes, trabeculectomy with 5-fluorouracil in 3 eyes and cyclocryopexy in 2 eyes. Despite this 3 eyes became phthisical and the final visual acuity in all eyes ranged from no light perception to 6/60. Three patients with end-stage renal disease died within 15 months of diagnosis of venous occlusion.
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PMID:Ischaemic central retinal vein occlusion in the young. 768 66

Of the uncommon anemias, "common" types include the anemia of renal disease, thalassemia, myelodysplastic syndrome and the anemia of chronic disease. These conditions may be suggested by the clinical presentation, laboratory test values and peripheral blood smear, or by failure of the anemia to respond to iron supplements or nutrient replacement. The principal cause of the anemia of renal disease is a decreased production of red blood cells related to a relative deficiency of erythropoietin. When treatment is required, erythropoietin is administered, often with iron supplementation. In the anemia of chronic disease, impaired iron transport decreases red blood cell production. Treatment is predominantly directed at the underlying condition. Since iron stores are usually normal, iron administration is not beneficial. Thalassemia minor results from a congenital abnormality of hemoglobin synthesis. The disorder may masquerade as mild iron deficiency anemia, but iron therapy and transfusions are often not indicated. In the myelodysplastic syndrome, blood cell components fail to mature, and the condition may progress to acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. The rate of progression depends on the subtype of myelodysplasia, but the leukemia is usually resistant to therapy.
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PMID:'Common' uncommon anemias. 1006 9

Children with chronic illness live with the specific consequences of their illness, as well as secondary endocrine abnormalities that further compromise growth and pubertal development. These secondary abnormalities may significantly add to their physiologic and psychological burden. Although these endocrine abnormalities theoretically arise as adaptations to the chronic illness, they may have deleterious effects if they persist untreated. Children with HIV infection and other wasting disorders, for example, show growth suppression out of proportion to the severity of their primary illness as a result of growth hormone resistance and enhanced cortisol secretion. In hematologic conditions such as sickle cell anemia, thalassemia, or bone marrow transplant, damage to the hypothalamus and/or pituitary may lead to growth hormone deficiency, gonadal insufficiency, and hypothyroidism. Growth and pubertal delay are also common among children with cystic fibrosis, along with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus caused by pancreatic fibrosis. Similarly, children receiving long-term steroid therapy have delays in growth and pubertal development, accompanied by risk for osteoporosis, whereas chronic renal disease is associated with growth and pubertal delay, as well as secondary hyperparathyroidism. Recognition of potential endocrinopathies in children with chronic illness is an important aspect of the care of these children because the disturbances are frequently amenable to treatment, permitting full or partial restoration of normal growth and development in these children. In this chapter, the endocrine consequences of common chronic conditions of childhood are reviewed, as well as the etiology of the endocrine disturbance, the clinical consequences, and recommendations for treatment.
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PMID:Advances in the recognition and treatment of endocrine complications in children with chronic illness. 1064 63

Renal dysfunction in thalassemia patients can be attributed to chronic anemia, and iron overload as well as to desferioxamine (DFO) toxicity. We analyzed the urine of 91 well-maintained homozygous beta-thalassemia patients, with no evidence of renal disease, for early evidence of kidney dysfunction by means of electrophoresis and quantitative biochemical tests. Measurement of liver magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) T2 values and serum ferritin concentration was used to estimate iron overload. In 55 of the 91 patients, urine analysis indicated signs of tubular dysfunction. The urine concentration of albumin and beta 2-microglobulin, as well as the activity of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG), correlated positively with serum ferritin concentration and liver iron deposition, as detected by MRI T2 values. This suggested that the cause of renal dysfunction in homozygous beta-thalassemia is iron overload. On the other hand, the same urine markers did not correlate with age, indicating that chronic anemia or desferrioxamine (DFO) treatment are not related to renal dysfunction in thalassemia.
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PMID:Urine biochemical markers of early renal dysfunction are associated with iron overload in beta-thalassaemia. 1264 14


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