Describe the general cuase and inheritance pattern.
Cause: gene mutations
Beta thalassemia: usually due to point mutations in promoter sequences or splicing sites
β-globin locus - short arm of chromosome 11
Alpha thalassemia: usually due to deletion of at least one out of the four existing alleles
The α-globin gene cluster is located on chromosome 16
Inheritance pattern: autosomal recessive
Describe the trait forms of alpha thalassemia.
In a normal cell, the α-globin chains are coded by a total of four alleles. Thus, there are four forms of the disease. The severity of alpha thalassemia depends on the number of defective α-globin alleles.
Silent carrier (minima form): one defective allele (-α/αα)
Alpha thalassemia trait (minor form)
Two defective alleles (-α/-α or --/αα)
Cis-deletion is common amongst Asian populations, whereas trans-deletions are more common in African populations
Children of parents with a two-gene deletion in cis are at higher risk of developing Hb Bart.
Hemoglobin H disease (intermedia form): three defective alleles (--/-α) → results in excessive production of pathologically altered HbH
Hemoglobin Bart's disease (major form): four defective alleles (--/-‑) → results in excessive production of pathologically altered Hb Bart (consists of four γ-chains (γ-tetramers))
Describe the trait forms of beta thalassemia.
In a normal cell, the β-globin chains are coded by a total of two alleles. Thus, there are two main forms of the disease.
Beta-thalassemia minor (trait): one defective allele
Beta-thalassemia major (Cooley anemia): two defective alleles
Sickle cell beta thalassemia: a combination of one defective β-globin allele and one defective HbS allele
Hemoglobin E/beta thalassemia: a combination of one allele with a hemoglobin E (HbE) variant and one defective β-globin allele. Produces a highly heterogeneous clinical spectrum, and in severe cases patients present with features of beta-thalassemia major. [3]
Hemoglobin E disease: a condition characterized by homozygosity to the HbE variant. Patients can present with mild features resembling beta-thalassemia minor (i.e., mild anemia).
Describe the pathophysiology.
Anemia results from a combination of inefficient erythropoiesis and increased hemolysis. The degree to which both mechanisms contribute to the severity of the disease depends on a patient's exact genotype.
Inefficient erythropoiesis → anemia
Beta-thalassemia minor and major: faulty β-globin chain synthesis → ↓ β-chains→ ↑ γ-,δ-chains → ↑ HbF and ↑ HbA2.
HbF protects infants up to the age of 6 months, after which HbF production declines and symptoms of anemia appear.
Alpha-thalassemia intermedia (HbH disease) and alpha-thalassemia major (Bart's disease): faulty α-globin chain synthesis → ↓ α-chains → impaired pairing of α-chains with β-chains and γ-chains→ ↑ free β-, γ-chains → ↑ HbH, ↑ Hb-Bart's
In minor and minima forms, production of the affected chain is reduced, but enough is produced to prevent severe anemia.
Increased hemolysis: One of the chains (either α or β) is reduced → compensatory overproduction of other chains → excess globin chains precipitate and form inclusions within RBCs → erythrocyte instability with hemolysis
Anemia → ↑ erythropoietin → bone marrow hyperplasia and skeletal deformities
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