Mild forms of alpha thalassaemia are difficult to detect in adults. Since alpha thalassaemia existing with structural defects of the beta chain of haemoglobin may lead to decreased levels of the abnormal haemoglobin, we examined individuals having sickle-cell trait for the possible coexistence of alpha thalassaemia. Patients with sickle-cell trait having haemoglobin-S (Hb-S) levels less than commonly expected were compared to two control groups--one with sickle-cell trait and the usual levels of Hg S and one with normal haemoglobin. Twenty-one patients with sickle-cell trait having Hb-S concentrations below 35% had 65.8% Hb A, 31.8% Hb S, and a mean corpuscular volume of 81.6 fl. Studies of the relative rates of alpha-, betaS- and betaA-chain synthesis in 14 of these individuals showed a mean alpha:beta ratio of 0.76. In patients with normal haemoglobin as well as in sickle-cell trait with Hb-S levels above 35%, this ratio was unity. These findings are consistent with the presence of alpha thalassaemia in patients with sickle-cell trait who have lower than usual levels of Hb S and microcytosis.
The variability in the clinical expression of sickle cell anemia led us to study factors which might influence the course of this disease. We examined erythrokinetics, blood volumes, and variables which influence hemoglobin function in a group of adults with sickle cell anemia of varying degrees of clinical severity. We were unable to correlate any single measurement with the clinical course; however, our patient sample was small and the data suggested areas for further study. An expansion of plasma volume noted in all patients. This made it difficult to predict red cell mass from the hemoglobin level, which consistently underestimated its magnitude. The red cell production index and iron turnover values indicated that there is often a suboptimal erythropoietic response to anemia in sickle cell disease.
JAK2 V617F mutation and BCR-ABL translocation have been considered to be mutually exclusive. However, many cases where both hits coexisted have been reported. We have personally managed a case too. We believe this hybrid entity is underdiagnosed. Thus, we decided to shed light on this “double hit” disease to improve its diagnosis and optimize its treatment. We reviewed the English literature in PubMed since JAK2 discovery. We found 33 cases reported so far. We summarized patient characteristics and analyzed possible interactions between JAK2 and BCR-ABL clones.
The diseases commonly confused with sickle cell anemia include sickle cell beta-thalassemia in which synthesis of betaA-chains are completely suppressed (HbS-betao-thalassemia). We obtained hematologic measurements and studied globin biosynthesis in five patients with this disorder and compared the results with those obtained in five patients with "mild" sickle cell anemia and seven individuals with sickle cell-beta-thalassemia having hemoglobin A levels of 20-30% (HbS-beta+-thalassemia). A distinction between HbS-betao-thalassemia and sickle cell anemia was not always possible on clinical, hematologic, or electrophoretic grounds. Thalassemia heterozygotes had hypochromia and microcytosis, not generally a feature of sickle cell anemia, although overlap of values did exist. The ratio of alpha to non-alpha, or alpha to betaS-chains in sickle cell anemia approximated unity, whereas patients with HbS-betao-thalassemia had a deficit of beta-chain production relative to that of the alpha-chain. The differentiation of HbS-betao-thalassemia and sickle cell anemia can be best made on the basis of family or biosynthetic study. We estimated the regional prevalence of HbS-betao-thalassemia to be 1:23,000 of the black population.
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