We investigated whether determination of serum transferrin receptor (TfR) is useful for detecting iron-deficiency in patients with chronic inflammatory diseases and for differentiating between iron-deficiency anaemia and anaemia of inflammation. Using an immunofluorometric assay, serum TfR was measured in 34 anaemic patients. Of these patients, 23 had a chronic rheumatic disease, 13 with both inflammation and iron-deficiency and 10 with anaemia of inflammation only; the other 11 patients had iron-deficiency anaemia and no evidence of inflammation. Serum TfR concentrations were lower in patients with anaemia of inflammation (2.6 +/- 0.2 mg/l, mean +/- S.E.M.) than in patients with iron-deficiency anaemia (6.7 +/- 1.1 mg/l, P < 0.01) or those with both inflammation and iron deficiency (5.8 +/- 1.0 mg/l, P < 0.01). Among patients with inflammatory disease, correlations between TfR and ferritin concentrations (r = -0.62, P < 0.05) and TfR and erythropoietin concentrations (r = 0.69, P < 0.001) were observed in iron-deficient subjects only. TfR, though not superior to serum ferritin, can help to distinguish between anaemia of inflammation and iron-deficiency anaemia and to identify iron-deficiency in subjects with chronic inflammation.
The current literature indicates that several abnormalities have been observed in the three hematopoietic cell lines of infants with Down's syndrome. This prospective, longitudinal study was designed to clarify the physiological variation in peripheral blood cell values of children with Down's syndrome by following 25 such infants during their first year of life. Apart from polycythemia in the first week of life, the hemoglobin concentration was, in general, the same as in normal term infants. At 9–12 months of age values for mean corpuscular hemoglobin and mean corpuscular volume tended to be elevated. Serum erythropoietin concentrations were low to normal. White blood cell counts were slightly lower in children with Down's syndrome than in normal children. The study infants had profound thrombocytosis from the age of 6 weeks to the end of follow‐up at 1 year. This study, the first longitudinal follow‐up of such subjects, indicates that infants with Down's syndrome often have evidence of polycythemia soon after birth and red blood cell macrocytosis and thrombocytosis later in infancy. In conclusion, we carried out peripheral blood cell counts in 25 infants with Down's syndrome, but with no actual hematological disturbance, during their first year of life, and compared them with values for normal term infants.
Familial juvenile nephronophthisis (NPH) is a hereditary form of chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis with onset in childhood. About one-third of patients develop anaemia before renal insufficiency. We investigated the pathogenetic mechanisms leading to anaemia by comparing 6 patients with NPH and 12 reference patients with other renal diseases. We studied their iron metabolism and measured transferrin receptor-ferritin ratios. There was no evidence for iron deficiency or haemolysis. The serum erythropoietin concentrations of the patients with NPH (12 +/- 2.3 U/I) were low compared with the 12 reference patients (25 +/- 18.9 U/I). In the 2 patients with NPH who were fully investigated, the pharmacokinetics of recombinant human erythropoietin appeared normal. Thus, anaemia in patients with NPH does not result from iron deficiency or correlate with impaired iron status. The mechanism underlying the anaemia of NPH appears to affect the function or regulation of the cells producing erythropoietin.
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