SICKLE CELL DISEASE

or sickle cell anemia, inherited disorder of the blood in which the oxygen-carrying hemoglobin pigment in erythrocytes (red blood cells) is abnormal. This "hemoglobin-S" crystallizes in small capillaries, where the concentration of oxygen in the blood is low (but sufficient for normal hemoglobin), causing the red blood cells to assume distorted, sicklelike shapes. Linus Pauling discovered the chemical abnormality of the hemoglobin molecule that causes the erythrocyte sickling in 1949.

The sickled red blood cells tend to clog small blood vessels, depriving the tissues they serve of blood and oxygen. Painful "crises" result, with symptoms depending on the site affected (e.g., joint and abdominal pain or kidney damage). Strokes or seizures can occur if the brain is affected. Lung infections resulting from the patient's disinclination to take painful deep breaths are a frequent complication. In addition, the sickled erythrocytes are fragile and subject to rupture and destruction, leading to hemolytic anemia (reduction of oxygen-carrying hemoglobin caused by premature destruction of red blood cells) and such symptoms as fatigue, jaundice, and headaches.

Treatment

There is no cure for the disease, but advancements in treatment have improved median survival to 42 years for men and 48 years for women. Cerebral hemorrhage or shock is the usual cause of mortality in children. Recent studies have indicated that regular blood transfusions can prevent strokes in children. Anemia is treated with folic acid. Sickle cell crises may be treated with intravenous hydration, pain medication, antibiotics, oxygen, and transfusions. Hydroxyurea, formerly used as a cancer treatment, has been helpful to many adults with the disease, lessening the frequency and severity of crises. New drugs for reducing the severity of crises are being tested as well. One acts as a lubricant, allowing sickled cells to flow more easily through tiny vessels. The other helps to prevent tissue deprived of blood from dying during a crisis.

Incidence

The disease is confined mainly to blacks, especially those of W African descent, but it also occurs in persons of Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, and Indian origin. The mutation may at one time have had an advantageous effect; those afflicted with the abnormality have a higher survival rate in malaria-infested zones.

Under normal circumstances the disease occurs only in those patients who inherit the gene for the abnormal hemoglobin from both parents. This so-called homozygous form of the disease occurs in 1 in 400 African Americans. About 8% of African Americans have sickle cell trait; that is, they are heterozygotes, usually symptomless carriers who have inherited a normal hemoglobin gene from one parent and hemoglobin-S from the other. There are also intermediate forms of the disease that result when a gene for hemoglobin-S is inherited from one parent and a gene for any of several other abnormal kinds of hemoglobin is inherited from the other. Genetic screening is recommended for prospective parents at risk of passing on the disease. If both parents are carriers (i.e., have sickle cell trait), then each child has a one in four chance of having sickle cell disease.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Sickle Cell Disease  - 674 results

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...Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Sickle Cell Disease Guideline Panel (1993) Sickle Cell Disease: Screening, Diagnosis...Health and Human Services. Sickle Cell Society (1981) Sickle Cell Disease: The Need for Improied Seruices...
Gauchers Disease Niemann-Pick Disease Wolman Disease Metachromatic...Abnormalities Beta Thalassemia Major Sickle-Cell Disease Inherited Immune...Deficiency Absence of T B Cells SCID Absence of T Cells, Normal B Cell SCID Common Variable Immunodeficiency
...synthesis by genes has been found in connection with sickle cell anaemia, a human disease which is inherited according to the Mendelean...Ingram that the haemoglobin extracted from sickle cells differs from normal human haemoglobin in a single...
...current knowl- edge of sickle cell anemia. Epidemiologists...graphic distributions of diseases, noticed that the most...pockets of sickle cell disease were virtually identical...connection between sickle cell and malaria did turn...who had active sickle cell anemia died at a relatively...deduced that sickle cell conferred some survival...swallowed up in the sickling cells where, because sickle...
...Crohn disease and ulcerative colitis are familial or complex genetic diseases, as opposed to simple genetic diseases. In simple genetic diseases such as sickle cell disease or cystic fibrosis, a person who inherits a copy of the defective gene...
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journal articles on: Sickle Cell Disease  - 282 results

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...families of children with sickle cell anemia. Urban Health...1984). Influence of sickle hemoglobinopathies on...adolescents with chronic diseases. Journal of Adolescent...adolescents with sickle cell disease: Support groups and...
...Raising Children with Sickle Cell Disease at the Intersection...Lisa Cook Sickle cell disease (SCD) is the most...other chronic blood diseases, such as HIV/AIDS...psychological adjustment to sickle cell disease? Journal of Black...
...children and adolescents with sickle cell disease. Journal of Pediatric Psychology...coping in adolescents with sickle cell disease. Annals of the New York Academy...Hurley T. Viera (Eds.), Sickle cell disease: Psychological and psychosocial...
...the genetics of the disease affected? The provisional...linked to having the disease, a possible pathogen...a "spread" of the disease). In the fifth class...similar symptoms to sickle-cell anemia. They examine how parasitic diseases differ from genetic...
...by genetic disease. Research...failure to treat sickle cell patients episodic...invoked the disease as a metaphor...identified sickle cell anemia as a...the name of disease eradication...sparked by sickle cell anemia, have...
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magazine articles on: Sickle Cell Disease  - 292 results

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...first sign that a boy had sickle cell disease (Ache/Ache). Of...nothing to do with sickle cell disease. Q8: How can...wellbeing of the Sickle Cell Disease patient? Answer...movement in the night, red cells could alter their shape...
...curing a disease". Let me explain. Sickle Cell Disease...is round cells turning spiky...of her red cells having changed...to spiky, sickle-shape and...do sickle cell disease patients...Ahulu -- The Sickle Cell Disease Patient...Sickle Cell Diseases; Clinical...
...Children with Sickle Cell Disease. by Marian...red blood cells--site...diagnose sickle cell disease, and that...of damaged cells. The addition...red blood cells with normal...complications of the disease is highest...children with sickle cell anemia...
...of patients with sickle cell anemia had a stroke...for children with sickle cell until now...with sickle cell disease have a genetic error...component of red blood cells. Instead of being...the red blood cells of a sickle cell patient are inflexible...
...hypertension and heart disease--its easy to lose...been a problem--sickle cell disease (SCD). Dr...EDWARDS: Sickle cell disease is an inherited...unborn children. Sickle cell disease causes red blood cells to change their shape...
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newspaper articles on: Sickle Cell Disease  - 162 results

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...Difference between Sickle Cell Trait, Disease. I was aware my patient...cell trait. Sickle cell trait is a carrier...often seen in sickle cell disease. Sickle cell disease -- one of...hemoglobin. Red blood cells take on a sickle or...
...DonAEt misunderstand: Sickle cell disease demands immediate treatment...Americans have sickle cell disease, in which oxygen...clumps inside red blood cells, turning them into a...organ damage. Sickle cell trait is different...
Sickle Cell. Byline: THE WASHINGTON TIMES As...conducts research on how adults adapt to sickle cell disease, I read the article "Raising the...among the estimated 3,500 adults with sickle cell disease in the Baltimore-Washington corridor...
...Wrapped Them Up in Cotton Wool Sickle Cell Twins Battle a Life of Pain HEALTH...heard the bad news: the twins has Sickle Cell Disease, a serious blood condition that...age that she was a carrier of Sickle Cell but did not have the full...
The Sickle Cell Anemia Tragedy. Byline...the issue of sickle cell," (Metropolitan...treatment of sickle cell anemia using umbilical cord blood stem cells. Here are three examples...from the ravages of the disease by his younger sisters...cells for more than 67 diseases including leukemia and...
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encyclopedia articles on: Sickle Cell Disease  - 7 results

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SICKLE CELL DISEASE or sickle cell anemia, inherited disorder...erythrocytes (red blood cells) is abnormal. This...destruction of red blood cells) and such symptoms as...with folic acid. Sickle cell crises may be treated with...
...induce those cells to become stem cells, and U.S. researchers have used similar induced stem cells in mice experimentally to treat sickle-cell disease. The first embryonic stem cells to be isolated were extracted by...
...erythrocytes (red blood cells), an abnormally low...hemoglobin in the individual cells, or both these conditions...dark-skinned people. Sickle cell disease is inherited as a recessive...hemoglobin protein. In sickle cell disease a single...
...only if it occurs in germ, or sex cell, tissue; somatic, or body cell...dramatic. For example, the inherited sickle cell disease is the result of a mutation that...proteins called enzymes control most cell activities, a mutation affecting...
...g., Tay-Sachs or sickle cell disease ). In such a case...free of certain genetic diseases before it is implanted...genetic markers for diseases and develop blood tests...predisposition to a disease or condition. See also...
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