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 clinical and haematological features of homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease were compared in 30 Greek and 310 Jamacian patients. Deletional alpha-thalassaemia, which modifies SS disease, is rare among Greek patients, so only Jamacian patients with four alpha-globin genes were included in the control group. Greek patients had higher total haemoglobin concentration and red cell counts, and lower mean cell haemoglobin concentration (MCHC) and reticulocyte counts. They also had a more normal body build and more adults had persistent splenomegaly. Fewer had a history of leg ulceration or priapism but more reported acute chest syndrome. The comparatively mild disease in Greek patients is consistent with less haemolysis and sickling and therefore less bone marrow expansion. In the absence of amelioriating factors such as high HbF concentration or alpha-thalassaemia, these findings may be explained by the low MCHC.
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PMID:Comparison of homozygous sickle cell disease in northern Greece and Jamaica. 197 84

Restriction endonuclease analysis was used to detect alpha-gene deletions and to determine the haplotypes in the DNA of the beta S-gene-cluster [Benin, Central African Republic (CAR), and Senegal] in 221 patients with sickle cell anemia (SS). The clinical expression of SS was modified by the beta S-gene-cluster polymorphisms and the alpha-gene status (alpha-thalassemia-2). The overall risk of soft tissue organ failure caused by the obliterative sickle vasculopathy (including stroke, renal failure, chronic lung disease with cor pulmonale, leg ulcers, and young adult death) was increased threefold in those with a CAR haplotype and was decreased in those with a Senegalese chromosome (p = 0.003). In the presence of a Senegalese haplotype, the patient's health is better, and with the CAR haplotype it is always worse. With the Benin, it is intermediate. Acute recurrent clinical events including hospitalized sickle cell crisis, bone infarction, and infection are decreased in frequency in those with a Senegalese haplotype. The risk of most acute events including acute chest syndrome is equivalent in those with Benin or CAR haplotypes. In the United States, alpha-thalassemia-2 is co-inherited randomly among the beta S-gene-cluster haplotypes. Acute events occurring during childhood are minimally effected by this co-inheritance. The risk of soft tissue organ failure is decreased. After the age of 20 years, painful episodes of the lumbar dorsal area are increased in patients who had alpha-thalassemia-2 in association with degenerative bone disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Beta S-gene-cluster haplotypes in sickle cell anemia: clinical implications. 170 Jun 39

Haematological, clinical and some molecular genetic features of homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease in Saudi Arabia have been compared in 33 patients from the Eastern Province (Eastern) and 30 from the South Western Province (Western). Eastern patients all had the Asian beta globin haplotype whereas Western patients were more variable but predominantly of the Benin haplotype. Eastern patients had more deletional alpha thalassaemia, higher total haemoglobin and fetal haemoglobin levels, and lower HbA2, mean cell volume, reticulocytes, and platelet counts. Clinically, Eastern patients had a greater persistence of splenomegaly, a more normal body build and greater subscapular skin fold thickness, and Western patients had more dactylitis and acute chest syndrome. Painful crises and avascular necrosis of the femoral head were common and occurred equally in both groups. The disease in the Eastern province has many mild features consistent with the higher HbF levels and more frequent alpha thalassaemia but bone pathology (painful crises, avascular necrosis of the femoral head, osteomyelitis) remains common. The disease in the West is more severe consistent with the Benin haplotype suggesting an African origin.
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PMID:Two different forms of homozygous sickle cell disease occur in Saudi Arabia. 171 63

The red cell distribution width (RDW) has been studied during the clinical steady state in 1121 patients with homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease, 344 with sickle cell-haemoglobin C (SC) disease, 68 with sickle cell-beta+ thalassaemia, 49 with sickle cell beta 0 thalassaemia and in 130 control subjects with a normal (AA) genotype. The mean RDW was moderately increased in S beta + thalassaemia and SC disease and markedly increased in S beta 0 thalassaemia and SS disease. In SS, SC and S beta 0 thalassaemia genotypes, lower RDW values occurred in females and with alpha thalassaemia. The RDW correlated negatively with total haemoglobin, mean cell haemoglobin concentration, mean cell volume, and fetal haemoglobin (HbF) and positively with reticulocyte count in SS disease. A low RDW was associated with higher weight and less frequent dactylitis, painful crisis, acute chest syndrome, acute splenic sequestration, and hospital admissions. A low RDW in SS disease is consistent with a high total haemoglobin, high HbF, low reticulocyte count, alpha thalassaemia, and a more mild clinical course.
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PMID:The red cell distribution width in sickle cell disease--is it of clinical value? 847 4

The effects of alpha thalassaemia on sickle cell-beta zero thalassaemia have been studied by comparing haematological and clinical features in four subjects homozygous for alpha thalassaemia 2 (2-gene group), 27 heterozygotes (3-gene group), and 55 with a normal alpha globin gene complement (4-gene group). Alpha thalassaemia was associated with significantly higher haemoglobin levels and lower reticulocyte counts independent of the presence of splenomegaly. Contrary to expectation, alpha thalassaemia was associated with small but significant increases in mean cell volume and mean corpuscular haemoglobin concentration. Splenomegaly at age 5 years and episodes of acute splenic sequestration were significantly more frequent in the 4-gene group. There were no significant differences in painful crises, acute chest syndrome, or other clinical features.
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PMID:The interaction of alpha thalassaemia and sickle cell-beta zero thalassaemia. 321 94

Sickle cell chronic lung disease (SCLD) is a prime contributor to mortality in young adult patients with sickle cell disease, especially those with sickle cell anemia (SS). Both perfusion and diffusion defects have been demonstrated, with generalized pulmonary fibrosis and disabling restrictive lung failure. We report 28 cases (25 SS, 1 S beta(0) thalassemia, 1 S beta(+) thalassemia and 1 SO-Arab) which began during the second decade of life and which ended in death by the fourth decade, after an ordered progression to pulmonary failure and cor pulmonale. Myocardial hypoxia with multifocal fibrosis and segmental infarction occurred in more than one-third of the cases and sudden death was a frequent final event. We define 4 stages of SCLD, based on pulmonary function tests, chest roentgenograms, blood gases, and noninvasive cardiac studies; each stage is 2 or 3 years in length, until death ensues in Stage 4. Case-control analysis showed that the significant risk factors associated with SCLD are 1) the total number of acute chest syndrome events in an individual before the onset of SCLD, (p = 0.0001), 2) sickle cell crisis marked by chest pain (p = 0.03) and 3) aseptic necrosis (p = 0.005). Temporal clustering of acute chest syndrome episodes frequently heralds the onset of SCLD. The pulmonary arterial bed, which has low oxygen tension and low pressure in a slow-flow system, is ideally suited to facilitate the polymerization of sickle hemoglobin, causing endothelial damage and culminating in an obstructive arteriolar vasculopathy. Identification of the significant risk factors predictive of SCLD can lead to early diagnosis of the disease; this is the only hope for effective intervention therapy.
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PMID:Sickle cell chronic lung disease: prior morbidity and the risk of pulmonary failure. 333 82

Early symptoms were observed in a representative sample of 166 children with sickle cell-hemoglobin C disease diagnosed at birth. Symptoms were uncommon in the first year of life; in approximately 50% specific symptoms had developed by 5 years, but 22% remained without specific symptoms to 10 years. The age at presentation was significantly earlier in patients with low hemoglobin F levels, but was not influenced by heterozygous alpha-thalassemia-2. Painful crisis was the initial manifestation in 77% of the children; other symptoms included dactylitis (14%) and pneumococcal septicemia and acute splenic sequestration (4% each). The commonest nonspecific symptom was acute chest syndrome. The relatively mild early clinical course of sickle cell-hemoglobin C disease indicates that neonatal diagnosis does not have the same urgency as for homozygous sickle cell disease.
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PMID:Clinical presentation of sickle cell-hemoglobin C disease. 376 Oct 71

We have defined the clinical and laboratory characteristics of a group of patients with HbS-beta o-thalassemia plus alpha-thalassemia, by analysis of erythrocyte indices, hemoglobin A2 and F levels, globin biosynthesis studies and alpha-globin gene mapping. Patients with HbS-beta o + alpha-thalassemia closely resembled individuals with HbS-beta o-thalassemia except for balanced globin synthesis ratios and a lower HbF level. The frequency of painful crises, leg ulceration, aseptic necrosis of bone and acute chest syndrome was similar in HbS-beta o + alpha-thalassemia patients and controls with sickle cell anemia (HbSS), HbSS-alpha-thalassemia and HbS-beta o-thalassemia. These findings are consistent with previous work which failed to show a reduction in the vaso-occlusive severity of sickle cell disease by the coexistence of alpha-thalassemia.
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PMID:Interaction between HBS-beta-o-thalassemia and alpha-thalassemia. 608 25

Patients with homozygous sickle-cell disease may be homozygous for alpha-thalassemia 2 (alpha-/alpha-), may be heterozygous for alpha-thalassemia 2 (alpha-/alpha alpha), or may have a normal alpha-globin-gene complement (alpha alpha/alpha alpha). We compared the clinical and hematologic features of 44 patients who had sickle-cell disease and homozygous alpha-thalassemia 2 with those of controls with the two hematologic conditions. The patients with homozygous alpha-thalassemia 2 had significantly higher red-cell counts and levels of hemoglobin and hemoglobin A2, as well as significantly lower hemoglobin F, mean corpuscular hemoglobin, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, mean corpuscular volume, reticulocyte counts, irreversibly-sickled cell counts, and serum total bilirubin levels, than those with a normal alpha-globin-gene complement. Heterozygotes (alpha-/alpha alpha) had intermediate values. In the group with homozygous alpha-thalassemia 2, fewer patients had episodes of acute chest syndrome and chronic leg ulceration and more patients had splenomegaly, as compared with patients in other two subgroups. These data confirm previous suggestions that alpha-thalassemia inhibits in vivo sickling in homozygous sickle-cell disease and may be an important genetic determinant of its hematologic severity.
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PMID:The interaction of alpha-thalassemia and homozygous sickle-cell disease. 617 65

The characteristic clinical heterogeneity of sickle cell anemia (HbSS) may be, in part, a result of its interactions with alpha-thalassemia. Although alpha-thalassemia clearly affects some hematologic features of HbSS, its role in modulating the vasoocclusive severity of disease is not clear. To further explore this relationship, we examined the incidence of painful episodes, acute chest syndrome, aseptic bone necrosis, and leg ulcers in 3 patient groups with sickle cell disease: (1) 2,147 patients over age 2 yr, stratified according to mean corpuscular volume (MCV); (2) 183 patients selected on the basis of microcytosis and elevated HbA2, on whom globin biosynthesis studies were done; and (3) 125 patients who had alpha-globin genotype assigned by restriction endonuclease gene mapping. When patients were stratified by MCV, there was a reciprocal relationship between HbA2 levels and MCV, reflecting the presence of patients with beta o and alpha-thalassemia in the low MCV groups. The erythrocyte indices and HbA2 levels in patients classified as HbSS-alpha-thalassemia, by either globin synthesis studies or gene mapping, were very similar to those previously reported by others. Neither microcytosis, beta o, or alpha-thalassemia appeared to provide any clear protection from the vasoocclusive complication evaluated, and the prevalence of aseptic necrosis was increased in patients with microcytosis over age 20 yr and in groups with alpha-thalassemia. The effects of a reduced MCV and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC), of possible benefit by themselves, when accompanied by a reduction in hemolysis and rise in hemoglobin concentration, as in HbSS-alpha-thalassemia, may cause sufficient rise in blood viscosity in critical vascular beds to impair blood flow and negate any amelioration of vasoocclusive complications in HbSS.
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PMID:Effects of thalassemia and microcytosis on the hematologic and vasoocclusive severity of sickle cell anemia. 672 53


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