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Query: UMLS:C0039730 (thalassemia)
10,305 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The skeletal system manifestations of thalassemia are characterized by severe osteoporosis, frequent fractures and delayed healing. Permanent deformity and disability can complicate the fractures. Surgical correction of deformity by osteotomy of severely osteoporotic bone and immobilization without internal fixation was successful in a 20-year-old woman. While operative correction of deformity is not routinely recommended, the good experience with this case suggests that similar orthopedic procedures can be included in the treatment of thalassemia.
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PMID:Supracondylar osteotomy in thalassemia. 70 50

The study of calcium metabolism in ten thalassaemic children comperatively with controls after oral administration of 47Ca has shown diminished intestinal absorption. It is suggested that this finding is propably related in part with the pathogenesis of the osteoporosis in thalassaemia.
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PMID:Calcium metabolism in children suffering from homozygous beta-thalassaemia after oral administration of 47Ca. 127 16

We present the case of a 48-year-old premenopausal woman with right lumbosciatalgia secondary to osteoporosic vertebral collapses. Two of her three offsprings, a 31-year-old man and a 16-year-old woman, had chronic dorsolumbalgia, the study of which suggested the diagnosis of minor beta-thalassemia. As opposed to thalassemic osteoarthropathy, frequently observed in the forms of "major" and "minor" beta-thalassemia, rheumatic manifestations have almost never been described in the "minor" forms. We highlight the possibility of symptomatic osteoporosis as the first manifestation and we review the locomotive disorders associated to this hemoglobinopathy.
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PMID:[Osteoporosis as the first manifestation of minor beta-thalassemia]. 162 1

The authors clinically and radiographically examined 72 patients with homozygous beta thalassemia. The clinical data were compared to the degree of osteoporosis calculated by Singh's method. The results indicate a high incidence of skeletal changes in patients with thalassemia, including lower limb-length discrepancy (16.6%), upper limb-length discrepancy (5.5%), axial deviation of the limbs (8.3%), osteochondrosis (2.7%), and osteopenia (25%). Based on their observations, the authors identify skeletal changes of adulthood (osteopenia) and childhood (limb-length discrepancy, axial deviation, osteochondrosis). The authors hypothesize that osteoporotic changes are caused principally by hyperplasia of the bone marrow, which widens the medullary space and increases intramedullary pressure, leading eventually to osteoporosis.
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PMID:Skeletal changes in thalassemia major. 179 39

The authors examine 72 patients affected with homozygous B-thalassemia; The study was conducted by clinical-hematological and radiologic examination. The Singh method is used to compare clinical data with the degree of osteoporosis. The results indicate that there is a high frequency of osteoporotic abnormalities in thalassemia. The authors postulate that osteoporotic lesions are principally caused by hyperplasia of the marrow, the overactive bone marrow widening the medullary space and the increased intramedullary pressure causing osteoporosis.
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PMID:Osteoporosis in patients affected with thalassemia. Our experience. 180 51

There were altogether 68 patients suffered from beta-thalassemia in the Veterans General Hospital from 1979 to 1986. However only 18 patients had abnormal roentgenologic findings. They were 7 males and 11 females. Their ages ranged from 8 months to 47 years with an average of 13 years. Clinically beta-thalassemia was divided into 3 types: 1) thalassemia major, 2) thalassemia intermediate, 3) thalassemia minor. The osteoporosis, hepatosplenomegaly, and extramedullary hematopoiesis with pseudo-tumor formation. We concluded that the roentgenologic manifestation of the patient was more in patients with major or intermediate type.
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PMID:[The relationship of clinical severity and roentgenologic findings in beta thalassemia]. 227 71

The histological features of thalassemic bone are imperfectly known, and the roles of bone marrow hyperactivity, iron overload or vitamin D deficiency in the pathogenesis of the disease are not clearly identified. In this study we examined iliac crest biopsies from 17 transfusion-dependent children with homozygous beta-thalassemia and severe radiological skeletal thalassemic changes, including widening of medullary spaces and osteoporosis. Rachitic lesions were not observed. Serum ferritin concentrations were increased in all but one subject. Iron deposits were histochemically detected in bone marrow, at the marrow-bone interface, along cement lines and mineralizing perimeters. Minor changes were present in trabecular bone, and osteomalacia was absent. By contrast, cortical bone exhibited severe changes including fissures and focal mineralization defects. Plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentrations measured during the winter (December-May, 6.5 +/- 4.9 ng/ml, mean +/- SD, n = 6) and during the summer (June-November, 13.8 +/- 8.4 ng/ml, n = 9) did not differ from those of age-matched children living in the same country. Seven patients had moderate hypocalcemia but no biological signs suggestive of vitamin D deficiency: all had normal alkaline phosphatase activity, normal or slightly elevated plasma phosphate, only two had low plasma 25(OH)D concentrations and two others supranormal values of plasma immunoreactive parathyroid hormone. These results show that iron overload and vitamin D deficiency do not seem to play an important role in the pathogenesis of thalassemic bone disease, which is characterized by cortical lesions probably related to marrow hyperactivity.
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PMID:Bone disease in children with homozygous beta-thalassemia. 230 56

Quantitative computed tomography (QCT) was used to assess trabecular bone mineral concentration in the vertebrae of 132 children, 45 with suspected disorder of bone mineralisation, 54 with thalassaemia and 37 controls. The range for bone mineral concentration in controls, expressed as equivalent K2HPO4 concentrations, was 90-190 mg cm-3. Abnormally low values were seen in all untreated children with idiopathic juvenile osteoporosis, 3/9 steroid recipients, and three patients with osteogenesis imperfecta. Abnormally high values were seen in 10/14 chronic renal failure patients. Comparison of the single and dual-energy methods showed that the single energy method, which has a lower radiation dose and is less prone to error from movement artifact, is satisfactory in most paediatric applications.
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PMID:Computed tomographic assessment of vertebral bone mineral in childhood. 232 Oct 51

Larger and more perfect bone mineral crystals and decreased bone magnesium concentration were found in postmenopausal osteoporosis, senile osteoporosis, alcoholic osteoporosis and osteoporosis associated with thalassaemia. The decreased bone magnesium concentration and the increased retention of magnesium in the magnesium load test suggest magnesium deficiency in post-menoposal osteoporosis, probably caused by magnesium malabsorption.
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PMID:Recent data on magnesium and osteoporosis. 307 5

The incidence of aseptic necrosis of femoral head in homozygous beta-thalassaemia (Cooley's anaemia)--which is indeed significantly high--is not satisfactorily referred in late literature regarding haemolytic syndromes. Therefore, 4 cases of osteonecrosis of femoral head, recently recognized in a series of 280 patients affected by Cooley's anaemia (14.5 0/00) are presented, and a review of hypotheses about the pathogenesis of the lesions is considered. In Cooley's anaemia, the skeletal lesion (osteoporosis) must be believed as a propitious state, in which some other pathogenetic events (i.e. local ischemia, bony age, etc.) and microtraumas overlap. In any case, characteristic blood circulation of the femoral head is the "conditio sine qua non" in developing osteonecrosis.
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PMID:[Aseptic necrosis of the head of the femur in Cooley's disease]. 370 10


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