Cases reported "alpha-Thalassemia"

Filter by keywords:



Filtering documents. Please wait...

1/3. Efficacy of immunotherapy using antigens of pythium insidiosum in the treatment of vascular pythiosis in humans.

    Human pythiosis is an emerging disease in the tropical, subtropical and temperate regions of the world. It is caused by the straminipilan, fungus-like, aquatic organism pythium insidiosum. pythiosis occurs in localized as well as systemic or vascular forms. Most patients with arterial pythiosis usually have underlying hematologic disorders such as thalassemia and aplastic anemia/paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) syndrome. Vascular pythiosis is characterized by ascending blood vessel infections and thrombosis of the major arteries especially those of the lower extremities. When the infection reaches a main artery, the patient usually dies within weeks. Since this pathogen is resistant to most antifungal drugs, immunotherapy was recently used to cure humans and animals with the disease. A modified P. insidiosum-antigen (PIA) formulation had already saved a young boy with life-threatening arterial pythiosis. Here, we report the therapeutic benefits of the PIA in eight patients with vascular pythiosis. Six of them had thalassemia and the other two had PNH. All of the patients had arterial occlusion of the lower limbs. P. insidiosum was isolated and identified by culture and by histopathology. All patients had evidence of active infection when immunotherapy began. After two injections of 100-200 microl of PIA (2.0mg/ml), at a 14-day interval, four patients (50%) had dramatic and complete remission. Two patients showed partial responses to PIA while the other two did not. Clinical responses correlated with the immunological reactions at the site of injection, clearance of the arteries and cytokine production. The latter included the shifting in serum levels of IL4 and IL5 to IL2 suggesting a switching from a T helper 2 (Th2) to a T helper 1 (Th1) subset. Our findings provide further evidence that immunotherapy using PIA is a safe and effective method to treat pythiosis in humans.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = antigen
(Clic here for more details about this article)

2/3. hydrops fetalis caused by homozygous alpha-thalassemia and Rh antigen alloimmunization: report of a survivor and literature review.

    Hematologic causes of hydrops fetalis include homozygous alpha-thalassemia and immune hemolytic anemias. We report the case of a boy with hydrops fetalis who had homozygous alpha-thalassemia and alloimmune hemolytic anemia due to anti-E and anti-C blood group antibodies. He received intrauterine red blood cell transfusions and postnatal chronic transfusion with iron chelation therapy. A non-myeloablative sibling stem cell transplant failed. He is now 5 years and 6 months of age, hypothyroid with short stature, but in overall good health. He is one of the oldest reported homozygous alpha-thalassemia survivors and, to our knowledge, the only survivor with immune- and nonimmune-induced hydrops fetalis.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.8
keywords = antigen
(Clic here for more details about this article)

3/3. Composition of the intra-erythroblastic precipitates in thalassaemia and congenital dyserythropoietic anaemia (CDA): identification of a new type of CDA with intra-erythroblastic precipitates not reacting with monoclonal antibodies to alpha- and beta-globin chains.

    Ultrathin sections of bone marrow cells from two patients with homozygous beta-thalassaemia, two patients with haemoglobin H (HbH) disease, a patient with congenital dyserythropoietic anaemia (CDA) type III and two patients with severe congenital dyserythropoietic anaemia of an unusual type were reacted with mouse monoclonal antibodies against various globin chains and the reaction visualized using a gold-labelled goat antibody against mouse IgG. The multiple rounded intra-erythroblastic inclusions found in homozygous beta-thalassaemia reacted with the monoclonal antibody against alpha-globin chains but not beta-globin chains, thus confirming that they consisted of precipitated alpha-globin chains. The branching intra-erythroblastic inclusions found in HbH disease and CDA type III reacted with the monoclonal antibody against beta-globin chains but not alpha-globin chains, indicating that they consisted of precipitated beta-globin chains. The two patients with severe CDA had been transfusion-dependent since infancy, had a normal alpha:beta globin chain synthesis ratio or parents with normal red cell indices, displayed prominent dysplastic changes in their erythroblasts, and had intra-erythroblastic inclusions resembling those seen in homozygous beta-thalassaemia. However, unlike those in beta-thalassaemia, the inclusions in these two patients did not react with the monoclonal antibody against either alpha- or beta-globin chains. The inclusions reacted with antibody against zeta-globin chains, but detailed studies in one of the patients indicated that the antigen involved was not zeta-globin. These patients have features not reported in the condition known as dominantly inherited inclusion body beta-thalassaemia and appear to suffer from a novel type of CDA in which the intra-erythroblastic inclusions may consist of some non-globin protein or structurally-abnormal alpha-globin chains.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.2
keywords = antigen
(Clic here for more details about this article)


Leave a message about 'alpha-Thalassemia'


We do not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content in this site. Click here for the full disclaimer.