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647881
thalassaemias
Description
Paediatrics (Haematological disorders) Mind Map on thalassaemias, created by v.djabatey on 18/03/2014.
No tags specified
haematological disorders
paediatrics
paediatrics
haematological disorders
Mind Map by
v.djabatey
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
v.djabatey
over 10 years ago
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Resource summary
thalassaemias
beta-thal
most often occur in people from
Indian subcontinent
Mediterranean
Middle East
2 types- both have severe reductn in prodn beta-globin (& so drop in HbA prodn)
disease severity depends on amount of residual HbA & HbF prodn
beta-thal major
MOST SEVERE FORM
can't make HbA (alpha2 beta 2) cos of abnormal beta-globin gene
clinical features
pallor
jaundice
bossing of skull & maxillary overgrowth
hepatosplenomegaly
need for repeated blood transfusions
beta-thal intermedia
milder form & variable severity
beta-globin mutations allow small amount of HbA &/or large amount of HbF to be made
clinical features
severe anaemia
transfusion-dependent
from age 3-6 months old
+ jaundice
failure to thrive/growth failure
extramedullary haemopoiesis
prevent by regular blood transfusions
if not prevented ->
hepatosplenomegaly
bone marrow expansion
-> classical facies
maxillary overgrowth & skull bossing
rare in developed countries
Mx
lifelong monthly RBC transfusions
beta thal fatal w/o these
aim= keep [Hb] > 10g/dl
to reduce growth failure
to prevent bone deformation
cause chronic Fe overload (cos repeated)
->cardiac failure
->liver cirrhosis
->diabetes
->infertility
->growth failure
so Rx w/ ... from 2-3 years old
iron chelation e.g. subcut desferrioxamine
oral iron chelator drug e.g. deferasirox
compliance hard but good comp w/ both -> 90% chance of living til 40s
if can't comply, high mortality in early adulthood from overload
complications of multiple transfusions
iron deposition
the most imp complication
seen in all pts
heart-cardiomyopathy
liver-cirrhosis
pancreas- diabetes
pituitary gland- delayed growth & sexual maturation
skin-hyperpigmentation
antibody formation (10% of kids)
allo-antibodies to transfused RBCs in pts make finding compatible blood hard
infection (now uncommon <10% of kids)
hepatitis A, B, C
HIV
malaria
prions e.g. new variant CJD
venous access
common prob
often traumatic in young kids
may need central venous access device e.g. portacath
predispose to infection
bone marrow transplantation
the only cure
only for kids w/ an HLA-identical sibling
cos then 90-95% chance of transfusion independence & long-term cure (success) but 5% chance of transplant-related mortality
prenatal diag
for parents both heterozyg for beta-thal
means 1 in 4 risk of having an affected child
offer DNA analysis of chorionic villus sample + genetic counselling
help parents make informed decision re to continue preg
beta-thal trait
heterozygotes usually asymptomatic
hypochromic & microcytic RBCs
so can be confused w/ mild iron def
tell apart by measuring serum ferritin
low in iron def NOT beta thal trait
measure serum ferritin in pts w/ mild anaemia & microcytosis before starting iron supplements
avoid unnecessary Fe therapy
mild or absent anaemia
+ disprop drop in MCH (18-22 fl) & MCV (60-70 fl)
so RBC count usually raised (> 5.5 x 10^12/L)
raised HbA2= most imp diag feature
usually seen in about 5%
mild elevatn of HbF by 1-3% in 50%
alpha-thal
manifestation depends on no of functional alpha-globin genes
alpha-thal major
aka Hb Barts hydrops fetalis
cause= deletion of all 4 alpha globin genes
so no HbA (alpha2 beta2) can be made
occurs in families of S. East Asian origin
presents mid-trimester
fetal hydrops (oedema & ascites)
from fetal anaemia
always fatal in utero or within hours of delivery
long-term survivors are those who got monthly intrauterine transfusion til delivery + lifelong monthly transfusions after birth
diag
Hb electrophoresis
Hb HPLC (high performance liquid chromatography)
only shows Hb Barts
HbH disease
3 of alpha-globin genes deleted
px often = mild-moderate anaemia
some pts transfusion-dependent
healthy ppl have 4 func alpha-globin genes
alpha-thal trait
= deletion of 1 or 2 alpha-globin genes
asymptomatic
mild/absent anaemia
hypochromic & microcytic RBCs
so can be confused w/ iron def
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