Rev Epidemiol Sante Publique
September 1999
Background: Relative hypotension has been reported in sickle cell patients. The aim of this study was to compare blood pressure in patients with SS disease and subjects with normal hemoglobin genotype AA and to assess whether the same clinical, biological and socio-demographic variables are associated to the mean arterial pressure in patients with sickle cell disease and normal subjects.
Method: Blood pressure was measured with a standardized automated oscillometric method in 88 SS patients et 88 AA control subjects seen in the University Hospital of Pointe-à-Pitre (Guadeloupe).
Sickle-cell anaemia is characterized by three categories of clinical signs: anaemia, vaso-occlusive phenomena and infective complications, which are described here according to age. The natural history of the disease can be divided into four periods: the neonatal period which is asymptomatic but important to organize an effective protection; the first 5 years of life are characterized by a high risk of mortality, a high level of morbidity due to severe infections, episodes of acute anaemia and painful crises typical of that age-group; the life of older children and adolescents is dotted with painful crises; it is in this period that degenerative tissue pathology begins; in adulthood, the acute episodes are less frequent, but multiple complications develop. Some of them (cerebral vascular accidents or lung diseases) may be fatal, while others are the source of chronic and disabling lesions, notably ocular, orthopaedic and renal lesions, which affect the functional prognosis.
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