Infections and sickle cell disease in Eastern Saudi Arabian children
M. I. el Mouzan, B. H. al Awamy and G. Absood
Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, King Faisal University, Dammam, Saudi Arabia.
The rate and pattern of infections in 144 Saudi Arabian children with
sickle cell disease (SCD) and matched normal control subjects are reported.
All diagnoses of SCD were made at birth by means of screening blood from
the umbilical cord. The children were prospectively followed up from birth
to 4 years of age. Severe bacterial infections occurred in none of the
children with SCD; one of the control children developed pneumococcal
meningitis. Acute gastroenteritis was significantly more common among
patients with SCD. For the first year of life, patients with SCD had
significantly more infections than did the control children; but the
reverse was true in the group that was 37 to 48 months of age. Considering
all types of infections for all age groups, no difference was noted between
patients with SCD and control subjects in terms of infection rate or
related hospital admission. There were no deaths caused by infection in
this series. We conclude that Saudi Arabian infants and young children of
oasis origin with SCD are not at increased risk of infections compared with
healthy children of the same age.