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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) - Students and Teachers |
Major Topics: Sickle Cell Disease , Bone Marrow and Stem Cell Transplant, Sickle Cell Trait and G6PD, Students and Teachers, Physicians, Nurses and Health Care Providers, Sickle Cell Newborn Screening
Sub-Topics - Click on a question below
I'm a Student doing a Paper on Sickle Cell Disease
Question - Help! I need information for a paper I'm doing for school
Answer - See
the following pages on our website: Sickle Cell Summary for Patients, World Wide Web Sites, New Research
update,and Professional Summary
about Sickle Cell Disease.
SCA is an autosomal recessive disease caused by a point mutation in the hemoglobin beta gene
(HBB) found on chromosome 11p15.4.Carrier frequency of HBB varies
significantly around the world, with high rates associated with
zones of high malaria incidence, since carriers are somewhat protected against malaria. About
8% of the African American population are carriers. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/disease/sickle.html
New document from the NIH: Sickle Cell Research for Treatment and Cure commemorates the 30th anniversary of the the National Sickle Cell Anemia Control Act (P. L. 92-294). This is a historical look at sickle cell disease research and treatment up until the present moment. It is excellent for both patients, family members and health care providers. It is in Adobe format for download. http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/resources/docs/scd30/index.htm
What About Sickle Cell Trait and The Different Sickle Cell Diseases
Question: What problems can I have if I have sickle cell trait and what is the differences in hemoglobin S concentrations
Answer: Sickle trait can cause you to have some blood in the urine and a slight increase in problems with kidney infections. Individuals with sickle trait can have pain if they go to very high altitudes, greater than 12,000 feet. Other than these uncommon problems, there should be not health problems from sickle trait. Individuals with sickle trait may have children with sickle cell disease if their partner also has sickle, thalassemia, or hemoglobin C trait. Please see the NIH guideline about sickle cell trait on our web site at: http://www.scinfo.org/nihnewchap3.htm
The mutation that makes the sickle hemoglobin (HbS) confers at
least two abnormal properties:
1) when de-oxygenated, HbS polymerizes to forms rods and fibers
that cause
the sickle deformation, and
2) when oxygenated, the HbS molecule is more unstable than normal
HbA and
may spontaneously decompose ( to met-hemoglobin, or to globin
without heme)
These properties are known from decades of research with HbS, and
can be
shown in test tubes. They are biophysical properties of the HbS
molecule.
What does this mean for the blood and for sickle cell disease
manifestations? The composition of hemoglobin in the red blood
cells determines their ability to sickle and cause sickle cell
disease problems.
I. People with sickle trait have one gene making HbS and one gene
making HbA, so you would expect equal amounts of HbS and HbA in
the RBC. The unstable property of HbS, however, means that not
all of the amount of HbS made in the red blood cell (RBC) stays
floating around in the RBC, because some of the HbS decomposes.
Therefore, the RBC contents for a person with sickle trait has
slightly less than 50% HbS, typically something like 55 to 60
percent HbA and 40 to 45 percent HbS. The predominance of HbA
inhibits and dilutes the ability of HbS to show its
polymerization property, and so sickle trait is not a form of
sickle cell disease. People with sickle trait have no anemia, no
painful episodes, no special
susceptibility to infection, and no implications for life
expectancy........ it is not sickle cell disease.
II. The most common form of sickle cell disease, HbSS, has no
genes for HbA present. A minor hemoglobin (HbA2) may be present
in a few percent of the total hemoglobin, and fetal hemoglobin
may be present in varying amounts (HbF). However, the vast
majority of the hemoglobin in the RBC is HbS, and it will
polymerize and cause the sickle cell disease manifestations.
III. Some people with sickle cell disease, as you know, have
HbSC, HbSD, HbS- O-Arab etc. One gene makes HbS and the other
gene makes another variant hemoglobin ( HbC, HbD, HbO-Arab, etc.)
that usually would not cause a disease by itself. There may be
equal parts HbS and the other Hb, or slight variation from equal
amounts in the RBC. However, the important difference between HbA
and these variant hemoglobins is their ability to participate in
polymerization with the HbS. When the inside of RBC contains a
combination of hemoglobins that will polymerize, then these are
types of sickle cell disease, with anemia, pain, spleen and other
problems. Differences in disease pattern between these types of
sickle cell disease and the pattern for HbSS can be found
statistically, but there is so much variability that the exact
disease course is impossibleto predict for an individual with
sickle cell disease based on Hb subtype.
IV. What gets a little complicated is HbS-beta-thalassemia. The
picture in the RBC for people with HbS-beta-zero-thalassemia is
the result of one gene making HbS and the other hemoglobin gene
is defective and cannot make anything (beta-zero thalassemia).
The hemoglobin produced by these two genes is HbS, and then there
are minor amounts of HbA2 and HbF. Again, the HbS can polymerize
and there is sickle cell disease manifestations statistically
similar to HbSS. Another type is HbS-beta-plus-thalassemia, in
which one gene makes HbS and the other gene is defective but
makes a little bit of HbA. There is less HbA produced than in
sickle trait, and so the end result in the RBC is more HbS (70
to90 percent of the total hemoglobin) than HbA (10 to 30 percent
of the to tal hemoglobin in the RBC). This amount of HbA is not
enough to dilute the HbS and cannot inhibit polymerization
completely, so the RBC can still sickle and this is a subtype of
sickle cell disease.
So in summary, the percentage of HbS is helpful for determining
what the difference between sickle trait and the
HbS-beta-plus-thalassemia,
Sickle trait, not a disease ------ HbS approx 40 percent
Sickle cell disease HbSC, HbSD, etc. ----- HbS approx 50 percent
Sickle cell disease HbS-beta-plus-thalassemia ------ HbS approx
70 percent
Sickle cell disease HbSS, HbS-beta-zero-thalassemia ---- HbS
approx 95
percent
However, for the subtypes of sickle cell disease like HbSC, the
really important fact is that the other Hb is able to participate
inpolymerization with HbS, not that the amount of HbS is close to
50 percent.
For clarification, it may be helpful to get in touch with your
local genetics office or sickle cell center. Additional
information may be found in recent reviews in the New England
Journal of Medicine (BunnHF, Sept 1997; Steinberg MH, April
1999), in textbooks: Embury, Hebbel, Narla, and Steinberg -
Sickle cell disease - Basic Principles and Practice, Raven Press
1994.............. Bunn and Forget - Hemoglobin and standard
hematology textbooks. For HbS polymerization, look for
publications by William Eaton, Hofrichter, or Frank Ferrone. For
the unstable property of HbS, look for publications by Toshio
Asakura in the early 1970s.
The First Description of Sickle Cell Disease
Question: When and by whom was the first description of sickle cell disease in the medical literature?
Answer: The first published reports of sickle cell
disease in African medical literature were in the 1870s. Savitt and Goldberg (1989) gave a delightful account of investigations into the story of Walter Clement Noel, the
first-to-be-described case of sickle cell anemia (Herrick, 1910). Noel, a first-year dental student at the Chicago
College of Dental Surgery, was admitted to the Presbyterian Hospital in late 1904 where Ernest E. Irons, a
27-year-old intern, obtained a history and performed routine physical, blood, and urine examinations. He noticed
that Knoll's blood smear contained 'many pear-shaped and elongated forms' and alerted his attending physician,
James B. Herrick, to the unusual blood findings. Irons drew a rough sketch of these erythrocytes in the hospital
record. Herrick and Irons followed Noel over the next 2.5 years through several episodes of severe illness as he
continued his dental studies. Thereafter, Noel returned to Grenada to practice dentistry. He died 9 years later at the
age of 32. Curiously, Irons, who lived from 1877 to 1959, was not included by Herrick, who lived from 1861 to
1964, in the authorship. Savitt, T. L.; Goldberg, M. F. : Herrick's 1910 case report of sickle cell anemia: the rest of the story. J.A.M.A. 261: 266-271, 1989.
Herrick, J. B. : Peculiar elongated and sickle-shaped red blood corpuscles in a case of severe anemia. Arch. Intern. Med. 6: 517-521, 1910.
Which chromosome is the sickle mutation
found on ?
Question: Which chromosome is the sickle mutation found on?
Answer: Chromosome
11 where the Beta chain of hemoglobin in coded. There is one
amino acid substitution, a valine for glutamic acid in the beta
6th position that forms sickle beta chains. Two sickle beta
chains combined with two alpha chains and four iron containing
heme groups form sickle hemoglobin. See our tutorial
http://www.scinfo.org/tutorial/Sickle%20Cell/sld004.htm
Life Expectancy for Sickle Cell Disease
Question: What is the average life expectancy for some one with sickle cell disease?
Answer: Median survival of individuals of all ages with sickle cell disease based on genotype
and sex (Platt OS, Brambilla DJ, Rosse WF, et al. Mortality in sickle cell disease-
Life expectancy and risk factors for early death. N Engl J Med 330(23): 1639-1644 (1994).
Sex and Genotype Median Survival
Males with Hb SS - 42 years
Females with Hb SS - 48 years
Males with Hb SC - 60 years
Females with Hb SC - 68 years
Note that this was reported in 1994. Now in 2002 many new advances with the medication hydrea, the new pneumoccocal vaccine Prevnar, stroke prevention with TCD, and cures with bone marrow transplants the life expectancy is increasing.
Sickle Cell Student with a Sprain
and School Guidelines
Question: I am a teacher with a student who has sickle cell disease. Do I use ice on an injury or sprain in a sickle cell patient? What else could I do to keep them well and in class.
Answer: There
is no clinical study that solidly demonstrates what to do for
asickle cell child with a sprain, but what we have been doing at
sickle cell summer camp is a cool compress of wet towel, rather
than icepack. Otherwise, the basic recommendations for school is
to acknowledge that the child has sickle cell disease, but try to
let him or her be as normal as possible with a few caveats:
1) avoid dehydration - allow the child to go to the drinking
fountain or bring water bottle as necessary
2) allow for increased urination - may need more frequent trips
to the restroom
3) allow for decreased endurance - let the child to set his or
her own pace during strenuous exercise, and to take rest breaks
when fatigued
4) avoid extremes of temperature - encourage child to dress in
layers when the weather is changing, or when going from indoors
to outdoors.
5) prompt medical attention for fever (most centers say 38.5C or
101.3F) - need to call parents to bring child for medical
evaluation within a hour to rule out sepsis, get blood culture,
IV or IM antibiotics
6) develop guidelines with parents for how they would like to
have painful episodes managed. Often extra fluids, rest break,
and Tylenol or Motrin are sufficient.
7) if child has severe sickle cell disease complications and if
the family is willing, perhaps educate classmates about sickle
cell disease manifestations such as jaundice, frequent medical
absences, decreased endurance, and the need for peers to help the
child cope with complicated sickle cell disease. On the other
hand, some children have so few sickle cell problems that no
special education is needed.
8) remind the family that the child should have regular medical
care &
take medications as prescribed. See
What
Teachers and Employers should Know,
New Treatments
Question - My son is
a sickle cell patient. He is 19 years old. I recently heard that
a cure was being developed. I was wondering if you could send me
any information on the research and how fast it is developing.
Answer - The only true
cure today is bone marrow transplant to replace the
factory that makeds the red blood cells with a matched donor,
usually a
brother or sister with out sickle cell disease. There are
medications
like hydroxyurea that decrease pain episodes and complications.
New
research is under way for better treatments and a cure for all. see New
Research update
Ask a question - contact the Sickle Cell Center staff at aplatt@emory.edu