Nine pregnancies in six patients with primary thrombocythaemia are reported. Eight pregnancies resulted in the delivery of normal infants. One pregnancy ended in spontaneous abortion at 7 weeks gestation. One pregnancy was complicated by superficial thrombophlebitis and a postpartum haemorrhage. We suggest that pregnancy in patients with primary thrombocythaemia can have a favourable outcome, but requires close monitoring. Administration of aspirin during pregnancy may be of benefit.
One hundred and twenty-four patients over the age of 75 years were assessed for the cause of their macrocytosis (MCV > 95 fl). A definitive diagnosis was reached in 75/124 (60%) by non-invasive techniques. The remainder underwent a bone marrow biopsy yielding a definitive diagnosis in a further six patients who had an identifiable myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). A high proportion of the remainder had morphological abnormalities which fitted with no recognized pathological entity. It is suggested that these may represent MDS in evolution.
We describe the response to plasma exchange in a woman with extreme gestational hyperlipidemia and severe pancreatitis. Her serum triglyceride reached an astounding level of 21,300 mg/dl-among the highest concentrations ever recorded. Two consecutive plasma exchanges led to a remarkable reduction in triglyceride levels of 73% and 82%, respectively. Plasma viscosity decreased by 50% after the first plasma exchange. This was associated with an equally dramatic and unexpectedly rapid resolution of severe pancreatitis. Plasma exchange can rapidly and safely resolve extreme hyperlipidemia and be associated with prompt resolution of pancreatitis in women with severe gestational hyperlipidemic pancreatitis.
We describe a 22-year-old Pakistani male with polycythaemia associated with homozygosity for a high-affinity haemoglobin mutant, Hb Sherwood Forest. This haemoglobin variant has an amino acid substitution in the beta globin chain at position 104, Arg-->Thr. In the two previously reported instances of this haemoglobin mutant the individuals were heterozygotes and were haematologically normal. We show here that the homozygous state for the mutation is associated with a compensatory erythrocytosis resulting from decreased delivery of oxygen to the tissues. A family study showed that both parents and two siblings are heterozygotes for the haemoglobin mutant and are haematologically normal. To our knowledge, this represents the first example of a beta-globin mutation producing polycythaemia in homozygotes but not in heterozygotes.
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