Of 144 patients with a positive direct antiglobulin test and having autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA), 12 (8.3%) satisfied diagnostic criteria for both warm antibody AIHA and cold agglutinin syndrome. All 12 patients had IgG and C3d sensitizing their erythrocytes, and samples of their serum contained IgM cold autohemagglutinins optimally reactive at 4 degrees C, but with a high thermal amplitude to 37 degrees C, and IgG warm autoantibodies. All red blood cell eluates contained IgG warm autoantibodies. The 12 patients had severe hemolytic anemia that responded dramatically to corticosteroid therapy, with the mean hemoglobin level increasing from 6.3 to 12.9 g/dL. Five patients (42%) had systemic lupus erythematosus, one patient (8%) had a non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and six patients (50%) had idiopathic AIHA; four patients (33%) had concomitant thrombocytopenia (Evans' syndrome). Nine patients (75%) were female. Four patients had unexpected alloantibodies potentially capable of in vivo hemolysis of transfused blood. Because of the severe hemolysis, the serologic findings, and the dramatic initial clinical response to corticosteroid therapy, these patients represent a distinct catagory of AIHA and should be given corticosteroid therapy quickly.
The blood-administering assessment program described above has improved transfusion practice, reduced the number of near-miss events, and may have prevented mistransfusions.
Studies from Africa have demonstrated that black people have higher vitamin B12 (cobalamin) levels than do white people. The authors compared healthy white people, black people, and Latin-Americans in the United States. Their study is also the largest in which the effect of race and sex on the cobalamin levels has been examined. Analysis of 233 healthy subjects showed that black people had significantly higher (P less than 0.0001) vitamin B12 levels than did white people. Latin-Americans had levels intermediate between those of white and black people, although their levels were significantly different only in comparison with white people (P = 0.0029). Based on the study of 305 healthy subjects, no sex difference in vitamin B12 levels was noted. Conflicting claims have been made on sex difference in the past. The authors conclude that there is a racial but not a sex difference in vitamin B12 levels in the United States. Like African black people, black people and Latin-Americans in this country have significantly higher vitamin B12 levels than do white people. This finding supports the thesis that genetic factors contribute to the racial differences in vitamin B12 levels.
BackgroundSquamous cell carcinoma of the scrotum is rare and its development in the scar of Fournier's gangrene is still rarer.Case presentationA 65-year-old gentleman presented with a small non-healing ulcer developing on right hemi-scrotum two years after the treatment for Fournier's gangrene. On histological examination it was found to be squamous cell carcinoma. He was successfully managed by surgery in the form of wide local excision and ilio-inguinal lymph node dissection followed by adjuvant radiotherapy and chemotherapy.ConclusionsSquamous cell carcinoma can develop in the scar of Fournier's gangrene after a long delay, which differentiates it from other scar carcinomas or Marjolin's ulcer.
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