Alkali desaturation test
- Information regarding alkali desaturation test absent from provided sources.
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- Evaluates fetal hemoglobin resistance to alkali denaturation.
- Adult hemoglobin denatures rapidly in alkaline environment.
- Fetal hemoglobin resists denaturation.
- Quantifies fetal hemoglobin percentage.
- Elevated fetal hemoglobin suggests beta thalassemia major or intermedia.
Nestroft test
- Information regarding nestroft test absent from provided sources.
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- Acronym represents naked eye single tube red cell osmotic fragility test.
- Functions as rapid, cost-effective screening tool.
- Detects beta thalassemia trait in large populations.
- Utilizes 0.36% buffered saline solution.
- Thalassemic red cells resist osmotic lysis.
- Suspension remains opaque.
- Normal red cells undergo lysis.
- Suspension becomes clear.
Peripheral smear
- Demonstrates variable morphological abnormalities based on thalassemia syndrome severity.
- Microcytic hypochromic red blood cells characteristically present.
- Anisopoikilocytosis prominently observed.
- Target cells indicate increased surface area to volume ratio.
- Tear drop cells visible.
- Basophilic stippling demonstrates ribonucleic acid or ribosome remnants.
- Nucleated red blood cells indicate severe ineffective erythropoiesis and extramedullary hematopoiesis.
- Polychromasia indicates reticulocyte presence.
- Marked anisocytosis, poikilocytosis, and normoblastemia seen in beta thalassemia intermedia.
- Supravital staining reveals golf ball-like inclusion bodies in alpha thalassemia.
- Precipitated beta-hemoglobin tetramers form golf ball-like inclusions.
- Irreversibly sickled cells and target cells visible in double heterozygous sickle-beta thalassemia.
- Extreme anisocytosis, poikilocytosis, and nucleated red blood cells characterize beta thalassemia major.
| Morphological finding | Pathophysiology and clinical significance |
|---|
| Microcytosis | Impaired globin chain synthesis; characteristic of trait and major forms |
| Target cells | Increased surface area to volume ratio; frequently noted in beta thalassemia |
| Basophilic stippling | Ribosomal remnants; indicates dyserythropoiesis |
| Nucleated red cells | Intense bone marrow stimulation; invariably present in severe syndromes |
| Golf ball inclusions | Precipitated beta-hemoglobin tetramers visible with supravital stain |
Superconducting quantum interference device (SQuID)
- Measures liver iron concentration directly.
- Functions as noninvasive assessment tool for tissue iron burden.
- Serves as alternative to liver biopsy for iron quantification.
- Requires highly specialized equipment.
- Available exclusively in limited specialized centers worldwide.
- Evaluates total body iron burden accurately.
- Assesses transfusional iron overload.
- Detects iron accumulation prior to clinical symptoms.
- Guides iron chelation dose adjustments.
- Prevents complications including hepatic fibrosis, endocrinopathies, and cardiomyopathy.
- Monitoring recommended every 1-2 years.
| Iron monitoring parameter | Target range | High risk range | Clinical implication |
|---|
| Liver iron concentration | 2-5 mg/g dry weight | Greater than 15 mg/g dry weight | Guides iron chelation therapy intensity |
Bone mineral density
- Assesses skeletal complications of chronic hemolytic anemia.
- Detects cortical thinning and medullary cavity widening.
- Identifies osteopenia and osteoporosis.
- Osteopenia and osteoporosis represent common complications of thalassemia.
- Prevalence reaches approximately 60% in patients over 20 years old.
- Risk correlates directly with advancing patient age.
- Pathophysiology remains multifactorial.
- Includes bone marrow expansion secondary to ineffective erythropoiesis.
- Endocrine dysfunction contributes significantly.
- Estrogen and testosterone deficiencies compound bone loss.
- Nutritional deficits including calcium, vitamin d, and zinc play synergistic roles.
- Chelator toxicity may contribute to metaphyseal dysplasia.
- Yearly bone densitometry evaluation mandated starting at age 10 years.
- Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry scan utilized for screening and monitoring.
- Annual screening prevents pathological fractures.
- Guides preventative and therapeutic management.
| Skeletal complication | Etiology and pathophysiology | Management strategy |
|---|
| Osteopenia and osteoporosis | Medullary expansion, hypogonadism, nutritional deficiency, genetic factors | Annual densitometry, bisphosphonates, hormone replacement, calcium, vitamin d, zinc |