SUMMARY A cord blood screening programme initiated in June 1973 had screened 68 000 normal deliveries by February 1979 with the detection of 216 cases of homozygous sickle cell disease. Regular review of these children in the Medical Research Council paediatric clinic has identified acute splenic sequestration as a major cause of morbidity and mortality in the first 5 years of life. In addition to classical episodes characterised by peripheral circulatory failure, minor episodes of increasing anaemia associated with an enlarging spleen and an active marrow were also common. These minor episodes appeared to have predictive value in children who later developed severe life-threatening episodes of acute splenic sequestration. Sustained hypersplenism was also appreciably more common in children developing minor or major episodes of acute splenic sequestration compared with those without such a history. It is proposed that the classification of acute splenic sequestration be expanded to include these minor episodes, and that consideration be given to prevention of recurrences by splenectomy particularly in patients who also develop sustained hypersplenism.
alpha Thalassemia modifies the hematologic expression of homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease, resulting in increased total hemoglobin and HbA2 and decreased HbF, mean cell volume, reticulocytes, irreversibly sickled cells, and bilirubin levels. The age at which these changes develop in children with SS disease is unknown. Ascertainment of globin gene status in a large representative sample of children with SS disease has afforded an opportunity to study the hematologic indices in nine children homozygous for alpha thalassemia 2 (two-gene group), 90 children heterozygous for alpha thalassemia 2 (three-gene group), and 167 children with a normal alpha globin gene complement (four-gene group). The two-gene group had significantly lower mean cell volumes from birth, higher red cell counts from one month, lower reticulocytes from three months, and higher HbA2 levels from one year, as compared with the four-gene group. Children with three genes had intermediate indices but resembled more closely the four-gene group. Differences in total hemoglobin or in fetal hemoglobin between the groups were not apparent by eight years of age. The most characteristic differences of the two-gene group were the raised proportional HbA2 level and low mean cell volume, the latter having some predictive value for alpha thalassemia status at birth.
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