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)

Data are reviewed describing hypoxemia, a newly identified feature in thalassemia. Evidence indicates platelet aggregation in the pulmonary circulation as being a key factor leading to hypoxemia and cor-pulmonale with right heart failure.
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PMID:Hypoxemia in thalassemia. 129 87

Up until recently in clinical practice suspected hemochromatosis with a pathological iron-screening test (plasma iron, percentage transferrin saturation, serum ferritin, desferrioxamine-induced urinary iron excretion) made a liver biopsy necessary. Today, as a first step, the density of the liver parenchyma can be measured by means of computed tomography. Normal findings obviate the need for laparoscopy. Since the late forties weekly or twice weekly phlebotomy has been the sole form of treatment for manifest idiopathic hemochromatosis. In the mid-sixties the hopes placed in chelating substances (desferrioxamine) were not fulfilled, because the plasma half-life (only 7-10 minutes) of this drug was too short. Even with several daily injections only a small amount of iron was removed from the body tissue (10-25 mg daily urinary iron excretion). The introduction of portable infusion pumps in the late seventies offered us a new possibility of administering desferrioxamine by subcutaneous injection (Propper et al., 1976). Until that time such treatment was successfully used only in the field of pediatrics to treat secondary transfusion hemochromatosis in thalassemia. In one case of idiopathic hemochromatosis with severe organic involvement (right heart failure, repeated esophageal hemorrhage and bronzed diabetes) we had to achieve rapid iron elimination, and for this purpose we used continuous long-term desferrioxamine administration by means of a portable infusion pump (Autosyringe) in addition to phlebotomy. Since, particularly in the critical initial phase of treatment when heart failure was always threatening, great care had to be exercised in the use of phlebotomy, iron removal was achieved largely by desferrioxamine administration (daily up to 240 mg iron elimination in urine and stools).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:New diagnostic and therapeutic possibilities in manifest idiopathic hemochromatosis. 651 41

Cardiac involvement represents the leading cause of mortality in both forms of beta-thalassemia, namely, thalassemia major (TM) and thalassemia intermedia (TI), and pulmonary hypertension (PHT) is part of the cardiopulmonary complications of the disease. PHT was initially documented in a small group of TI patients with right heart failure. In a subsequent study of a large 110-patient series, aged 32.5 +/- 11.4 years, age-related PHT was encountered in nearly 60% of cases, having caused right heart failure in six of them; interestingly, all patients had preserved left ventricular systolic function. Conflicted evidence, however, existed with respect to the development of PHT in heterogeneously treated and young TM populations. To resolve this discrepancy, a recent study compared cardiac disease between two large aged-matched groups of TM (n = 131) and TI (n = 74) patients, both treated uniformly in the currently accepted manner (regular transfusion and chelation therapy in TM, absence of any particular treatment in TI); well-treated TM patients, in contrast to TI patients, did not develop PHT, while systolic left ventricular dysfunction was present only in TM cases. PHT in beta-thalassemia results from a rather complex pathophysiology, in which chronic tissue hypoxia seems to hold a key role. Although both forms of the disease share a common molecular background, the diverse severity of the genetic defect and of the resulting clinical phenotype require a different therapeutic approach. Regular lifelong therapy in TM patients eliminates chronic hypoxia, thereby preventing PHT, whereas the absence of systematic treatment in TI leads to a cascade of reactions that compensate for chronic anemia, but at the same time allow the development of PHT.
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PMID:Pulmonary hypertension in beta-thalassemia. 1633 82

Screening for pulmonary hypertension (pHTN) has not yet become routine in sickle cell disease (SCD), despite clinical evidence of its high prevalence and associated mortality. Our objectives are to identify clinical conditions and laboratory findings predictive of/or associated with pHTN. One hundred twenty-five adult outpatients with Hb SS, SC, SOArab, Sbeta(0), or Sbeta(+) thalassemia, who underwent echocardiography and/or right heart catheterization due to cardiorespiratory symptoms, were studied. pHTN was identified in 36% (28/77) of SS/Sbeta(0) and in 25% (12/48) of SC/SOArab/Sbeta(+) patients studied. In SS/Sbeta(0) patients, pHTN was associated with low hemoglobin, low GFR, increasing age, no history of treatment with hydroxyurea and a history of leg ulcers, with trends for associations with higher total bilirubin, LDH levels, systolic systemic blood pressure, history of avascular necrosis, seizures, and cerebrovascular events. Twelve (40%) of the SS/Sbeta(0) patients with pHTN had >or= 1+ proteinuria. (P<0.039). The presence of proteinuria correlated with lower GFR and had a high positive predictive value (0.60) for pHTN in subjects with SS/Sbeta(0). The data also provided evidence that pHTN in this population is associated with right heart failure, with echocardiographic evidence of right ventricle enlargement and pericardial effusion. This study confirmed that even relatively mild elevations in pulmonary pressure are associated with high prospective mortality (hazard ratio: 15.9). We concluded that pHTN has a high prevalence in all Hb S related syndromes and is associated with increased mortality in SS/Sbeta(0). Kidney dysfunction, as indicated by proteinuria or decreased GFR, also represents sufficient reason to screen for pHTN.
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PMID:Pulmonary hypertension associated with sickle cell disease: clinical and laboratory endpoints and disease outcomes. 1772 99

Modern health care has greatly increased longevity for patients with congenital hemolytic anemias (such as sickle cell disease and thalassemia) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. It is estimated that 10% of patients with hemoglobinopathies and 0.5% of patients with HIV infection develop moderate to severe pulmonary hypertension. Pulmonary hypertension is a relentlessly progressive disease leading to right heart failure and death. Worldwide, there are an estimated 30 million patients with sickle cell disease or thalassemia and 40 million patients with HIV disease. Considering the prevalence of pulmonary vascular disease in these populations, sickle cell disease and HIV disease may be the most common causes of pulmonary hypertension worldwide. In this review, the available data on epidemiology, hemodynamics, mechanisms, and therapeutic strategies for these diseases are summarized. Because therapy is likely to reduce morbidity and prolong survival, efforts to screen, diagnose, and treat these patients represent a global health opportunity.
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PMID:Pulmonary hypertension: an increasingly recognized complication of hereditary hemolytic anemias and HIV infection. 1846 Jun 61

We present a 57-year old male patient with thalassemia intermedia and right heart failure. He had a 30-year history of anemia and short-term iron therapy without blood transfusion. Hemoglobin level was 7.1 g/dl and hematocrit was 22.7%. White blood-cell and platelet counts, and serum ferritin level were normal. Electrocardiography showed irregular narrow QRS bradyarrhythmia, suggesting slow atrial fibrillation at a mean rate of 35 beats/min. Echocardiographic examination revealed dilatation of the right atrium and ventricle, depressed systolic right ventricular function, advanced tricuspid regurgitation, and mild pericardial effusion. In the electrophysiologic study, no electrical activity was recorded in the right atrium. It was inexcitable at multiple sites and no retrograde conduction to the right atrium could be elicited by ventricular pacing. His bundle (HB) recording showed fixed retrograde HB activation with ventricular rhythm originating from different foci. Retrograde V-H conduction time during ventricular rhythm was 95 msec and did not change. There was no retrograde nodal conduction. A VVIR pacemaker was implanted. During a six-month follow-up, he felt well, his functional capacity was NYHA class II, and his basic rhythm was widened QRS arrhythmia with a rate of 20 beats/min. To the best of our knowledge, atrial electrical inactivity together with right-heart failure and pericarditis confined to the right heart chambers has hitherto not been reported in thalassemic disorders.
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PMID:Persistent atrial standstill and idioventricular rhythm in a patient with thalassemia intermedia. 1971 59

Beta-thalassemia is an inherited hemoglobin disorder resulting in chronic hemolytic anemia that typically requires life-long transfusion therapy. Although traditionally prevalent in the Mediterranean basin, Middle East, North India, and Southeast Asia, immigration of those populations to North America and Western Europe has rendered beta-thalassemia a global health problem. Cardiac complications represent the primary cause of mortality and one of the major causes of morbidity in those patients. Heart disease is mainly expressed by a particular cardiomyopathy that progressively leads to heart failure and death. The beta-thalassemia cardiomyopathy is mainly characterized by 2 distinct phenotypes, a dilated phenotype, with left ventricular dilatation and impaired contractility and a restrictive phenotype, with restrictive left ventricular filling, pulmonary hypertension, and right heart failure. The pathophysiology of the disorder is multifactorial, with a central role of myocardial iron overload and the significant contribution of immunoinflammatory mechanisms. Patients' management is demanding and requires a multidisciplinary approach, preferably in specialized centers.
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PMID:Beta-thalassemia cardiomyopathy: history, present considerations, and future perspectives. 2048 95