| Literature DB >> 21726208 |
Lucio Luzzatto1, Foluke Fasola, Léon Tshilolo.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Africa; developing world; haematology
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21726208 PMCID: PMC3470916 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2141.2011.08763.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Haematol ISSN: 0007-1048 Impact factor: 6.998
Fig. 1Plasmodium falciparum infection in a girl heterozygous for Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency. The blood film was stained by a procedure that causes lysis of G6PD-deficient red cells, producing their ghost-like appearance. As G6PD deficiency heterozygosity is a somatic cell mosaic as a result of X chromosome inactivation it was possible to show by this procedure that P. falciparum parasitized red cells are predominantly G6PD normal (see Luzzatto ).
Fig. 2Chronic complications of sickle cell anaemia. (A) Typical ulcer of 5 years duration on the lateral aspect of the right ankle in a 19-year-old male. Upon regular conventional conservative care the ulcer appeared to have healed on two occasions, but unfortunately it broke down again after minor trauma. A skin autograft was then carried out but failed. (B) Atypical ulcer of 3 years duration in the anterior aspect of the right thigh of a 26-year-old woman. The ulcer developed following repeated intramuscular injections of pentazocine, administered as a pain-killer by a nurse and by the patient herself. When self-care of the wound by dressing became unmanageable the patient saw a specialist and subsequently travelled to India twice for skin grafting, but the procedure failed on both occasions. It is seen that the ulcer in panel B is much deeper than that shown in panel A, reflecting a different pathogenesis. Whereas the ulcer in panel A was a direct complication of sickle cell anaemia, the ulcer in panel B can be regarded as an indirect self-inflicted consequence: painful attacks prompted administration of analgesics, and the patient, who was at the time a University student, opted for self-medication in order to avoid frequent visits to the hospital, thus saving time and money. The patient is still suffering from the consequences of ill-advised inappropriate management, but this ultimately still goes back to her underlying sickle cell anaemia. A significant impact of socio-economic status on the clinical course of sickle cell anaemia has been documented in Nigeria (Okanyi & Akinyanju, 1993).
Fig. 3Splenomegaly in Africa: different causes and different treatments. This 9-year-old girl had a massive spleen. A traditional doctor had applied tattoos or scarifications that did not control the condition. A likely diagnosis is hyper-reactive malarial splenomegaly (Bedu-Addo & Bates, 2002), and it is hoped that the condition will respond to prolonged administration of antimalarial drugs (Sagoe, 1970).
Common anaemias at the border between haematology and public health
| Designation | Aetiopathogenesis (main factor) | ‘Real’ cause | Standard therapy | Long-term management |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hookworm anaemia | Chronic blood loss from infestation with | Poor hygiene/poverty | Mebendazole, oral iron | Preventing worm infestation |
| Malarial anaemia | Recurrent infection with | High rate transmission of malaria by | Anti-malarial chemotherapy | Eradication of malaria transmission |
| Severe anaemia in pregnancy | Increased folate requirement | Poor folate intake | Folic acid, folinic acid | Improving nutrition |
| Severe post-partum anaemia | Ante-partum or post-partum haemorrhage | Inadequate ante-natal or obstetric care | Blood transfusion | Improving ante-natal care |
Management of relatively common conditions in onco-haematology: a few examples
| Category | Condition | Basic requirements for treatment | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia | Fludarabine, rituximab, chlorambucil | Typing for risk stratification may be out-sourced |
| Polycythaemia rubra vera | Phlebotomies; hydroxycarbamide | ||
| Burkitt lymphoma | Cyclophosphamide, vincristine, doxorubicine, prednisone | ||
| B | Hodgkin lymphoma | ABVD, BEACOPP; radiotherapy | Salvage therapy may not be available |
| Myeloma | Melphalan, prednisone, auto-BMT | Second and third line drugs may not be available | |
| Common acute lymphoblastic leukaemia | Vincristine, prednisone, intrathecal MTX | ||
| C | Chronic myeloid leukaemia | Imatinib; allogeneic BMT | Imatinib is expensive; allogeneic BMT may not be available |
| Acute leukaemia in adults | Several drugs, allogeneic BMT |
ABVD, doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, dacarbazine; BEACOPP, bleomycin, etoposide, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine, prednisone; MTX, methotrexate; BMT, bone marrow transplantation.