Background: Pyruvate kinase deficiency (PKD) is a rare recessive congenital hemolytic anemia caused by mutations in the PKLR gene. The disease shows a marked variability in clinical expression. We studied the molecular features of nine unrelated Argentinian patients with congenital hemolytic anemia associated with erythrocyte pyruvate kinase deficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHereditary xerocytosis is a rare disorder caused by defects of red blood cell permeability that are characterized by hemolytic anemia of variable degree and iron overload. Diagnosis is usually late and confused with other hemolytic anemias, which can lead to procedural indications, such as splenectomy, contraindicated in these patients. We report the clinical, haematological, and molecular characteristics of two patients from two unrelated families affected by hereditary xerocytosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency is an erythrocyte enzyme disorder caused by mutations in the G6PD gene, which has an X-linked inheritance. Here we analyze the clinical and laboratory characteristics of 24 subjects with G6PD deficiency over 25 years. Their median age at diagnosis was 10.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBeta thalassemia intermedia is a quantitative haemoglobinopathy covering a broad clinical spectrum, that results from the presence of one or two HBB gene mutations associated with secondary and/or tertiary genetic modifiers. We analyze the clinical and laboratory features of 29 patients with beta thalassemia intermedia, assessed over a period of 23 years. Median age was 10.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFβ-Thalassemia intermedia (β-TI) patients present with a wide spectrum of phenotypes depending on the presence of primary, secondary, and tertiary genetic modifiers which modulate, by different mechanisms, the degree of imbalance between α and β chains. Here we describe a new β(0) frameshift mutation, HBB: c.44delT (p.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVariant hemoglobins are the result of different types of mutations that occur in the globin genes. In many cases, these hemoglobinopathies are harmless, while in others they determine alterations in the physical and chemical properties raising clinical manifestations of variable severity. In the unstable hemoglobinopathies, the changes reduce solubility, inducing the formation of precipitates of denaturated hemoglobin (Heinz bodies), which damage the membrane and finally destroy the red blood cells prematurely.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe the laboratory and clinical characteristics of 50 patients with glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency (G6PD). G6PD deficiency represented 1.1% of all the diagnosis made.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF