Thalassaemia Flashcards
1
Q
What is the cause of thalassaemia?
A
A haemoglobinopathy caused by the absence of genes.
- alpha + trait, alpha 0 trait, homozygous alpha, HbH disease, alpha thalassaemia major
- beta thalassaemia, beta thalassaemia major
2
Q
What is the outcome of alpha thalassaemia major?
A
This form of thalassaemia is not compatible with life because HbF needs alpha chains in order to progress through pregnancy - the foetus will become progressively more anaemia before dying of cardiac failure
3
Q
Describe HbH disease
A
- missing 3 alpha genes
- results in lack of alpha chains but an excess of beta chains (in foetus/baby excess of gamma
- beta chains end up joining together to form HbH
- asymptomatic a lot of the time but needs blood transfusions in times of stress
- amount of Hb variable
4
Q
Describe what happens to haemoglobin and RBCs in beta thalassaemia major
A
- AR inheritance (missing both beta genes)
- unable to make HbA
- dyserythropoiesis
- small hypochromic cells
5
Q
Describe the consequences of beta thalassaemia
A
- thalassaemia faces/thickening of bone in skull giving hairlike appearance on x-ray (caused by the bone marrow trying hard to make cells in every bone producing cells everywhere instead of centralising to axial skeleton)
- iron overload (from repeated transfusions as iron cannot be excreted from the body, reduces life expectancy) - can be mediated by iron chelators
6
Q
What is the treatment for beta thalassaemia?
A
- blood transfusion 2-3 units every 3 weeks
- bone marrow transplant considered in childhood if sibling match (but can make child infertile)
- future options are gene therapy