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1.
Scand J Clin Lab Invest ; : 1-7, 2024 Jul 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38953608

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Major Thalassemia patients suffer from iron overload and organ damage, especially heart and liver damage. Early diagnosis and treatment with a chelator can reduce the complications and mortality of iron overload. Therefore, we aimed to investigate the biochemical and hematological predictors as an alternative and indirect indicator of iron deposition in heart and liver cells in comparison with the MRI T2* method as the gold standard. MATERIAL AND METHOD: MRI T2* was evaluated in the heart and liver tissues of 62 major beta-thalassemia patients undergoing regular transfusion and chelator therapy. Biochemical and hematological factors were also measured, including serum ferritin, serum electrolytes, liver enzymes, hemoglobin, blood glucose, and serum magnesium. The correlation between these factors was assessed using statistical evaluations. RESULT: Serum ferritin had a positive and significant correlation with liver siderosis based on MRI T2* (p-value = .015), and no significant association was observed with cardiac siderosis (p-value = .79). However, there was a significant positive correlation between cardiac iron deposition and fasting blood sugar level (p-value = -.049), and plasma level of liver enzymes (alanine aminotransferase (ALT) (p-value = .001), aspartate aminotransferase (AST ((p-value = .01)). Moreover, there was a significant negative correlation between cardiac iron overload and plasma magnesium level (p-value = .014). According to MRI T2*, there was no significant correlation between cardiac and hepatic iron overload (p value = .36). CONCLUSION: An increase in blood sugar or liver enzymes and a decrease in serum magnesium was associated with an increase in cardiac iron overload based on MRI T2*. Liver iron overload based on MRI T2* had a significant correlation with serum ferritin.

2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34727252

ABSTRACT

Cardiac hemosiderosis is the primary factor to derive the pathogenesis of cardiac dysfunction in patients with transfusion dependent thalassemia. Biomarkers assessment along with T2 * MRI study could be employed to evaluate the severity of iron deposition-related damage and determination of the diagnostic and prognostic value of these inflammatory factors. The study was conducted on 62 patients (12-44 years old) with major thalassemia. The patients were under regular blood transfusion and they had no signs of cardiac defects, and chronic diseases. The serum levels of inflammatory factors (NT-proBNP, CRP, Copeptin HS) were determined before routine transfusion. Cardiac iron overload was assessed by T2* MRI (within the last three months), and T2* lower than 20 ms was considered as cardiac siderosis. The obtained results were analyzed using statistical methods. 92% of patients showed an increased level of hs-CRP (> 2 µg/dL). All cases showed increased levels of NT-proBNP (> 150 pg/mL). Only 29% of subjects showed high level of Copeptin, 25.8% of patients demonstrated cardiac siderosis based on the T2* MRI (< 20 ms) results. The serum levels of inflammatory factors were not significantly correlated with cardiac siderosis. Given the obtained results, it could be deduced that the serum levels of inflammatory factors could not be exploited for early detection of cardiac siderosis in major beta-thalassemia patients.

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