Twenty-two patients with mild haemolytic anaemia and haemoglobin (Hb) Constant Spring (CS) of around 6% were studied because they were suspected of having homozygous Hb CS. Family studies revealed Hb CS trait in both parents of eight patients, supporting that they were homozygous for Hb CS. The other patients were included because they had clinical and haematological features similar to the diagnosed cases of homozygous Hb CS. Heterozygosity and homozygosity for Hb CS are clearly distinguishable in that the former is asymptomatic but the latter is associated with overt haemolytic anaemia, and the levels of Hb CS in the two conditions of less than 1% and around 6%, respectively, do not overlap. The findings in homozygous Hb CS contradict prediction. There are four alpha-structural genes per normal human diploid genome. Hb CS trait is believed to be almost equivalent to alpha-thalassaemia 2 or a loss of one alpha-gene because HB CS, and alpha-variant, is barely or not detectable. Homozygosity for Hb CS has thus been predicted to be equivalent to alpha-thalassaemia 1 or a loss of two genes. The latter is asymptomatic and associated with microcytic-hypochromic red cells. However, Hb CS homozygosity presents with mild overt haemolytic anaemia and normal sized red cells. Pathogenesis associated with Hb CS inheritance is more complex than originally believed. There is a possibility that the unstable alpha CS mRNAs precipitate and aggregate leading to pathology of red cells and to the basophilic stippling appearance, so striking in this syndrome.
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