Beneficial effect of blood transfusion in children with sickle cell chest syndrome
A. A. Mallouh and M. Asha
Department of Pediatrics, Dhahran (Saudi Arabia) Health Center.
Reports in the 1970s suggested that acute chest syndrome (ACS) in children
with sickle cell disease is usually due to bacterial infection. Studies in
adults and more recently in children, however, showed that proved bacterial
infection occurs in a minority of these patients and that vascular
occlusion is the main pathologic process. In a retrospective study of 32
episodes of ACS in children, a definite bacterial infection was found in 3%
(one patient), possible bacterial infection in 11% (four patients), and a
possible mycoplasma in 13% (five patients). With the intent to dilute
sickle cells, 23 patients received blood transfusion within 24 hours after
hospital admission; all showed a dramatic clinical and roentgenographic
improvement. Of the nine patients who did not receive a transfusion after
hospital admission, the conditions of five patients deteriorated but
improved after "late" transfusion; three patients showed slow improvement,
and only one patient improved within 48 hours. From this we conclude that
vascular occlusion might be the main process in ACS and that early blood
transfusion may be valuable in shortening the course and decreasing
mortality. The low hemoglobin value at presentation in our patients makes
dilution of sickle cells possible by packed red blood cell transfusion
rather than exchange transfusion.
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