scholarly journals Family Study in Addisonian Pernicious Anemia

Blood ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 27 (5) ◽  
pp. 599-610 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. ARDEMAN ◽  
I. CHANARIN ◽  
A. JACOBS ◽  
LORRAINE GRIFFITHS

Abstract Addisonian pernicious anemia was present in 6 of 9 siblings (Generation II). All 9 siblings had evidence of gastric pathology as judged by the presence of antibodies against parietal cells, abnormalities in the gastric biopsy, and diminution of secretion of acid and intrinsic factor. Parietal cell antibodies were present in 10 of 17 offspring of these 9 siblings who were available for study. Gastric biopsy in the older members of this generation (III) showed atrophic gastritis; some of the younger members showed superficial gastritis. Loss of intrinsic factor was always accompanied by loss of gastric secreting cells and there was no evidence that decline of intrinsic factor secretion occurred independently of hydrochloric acid.

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-4
Author(s):  
G. F. Cittolin-Santos ◽  
S. Khalil ◽  
J. K. Bakos ◽  
K. Baker

A 28-year-old Caucasian male with Hashimoto’s disease and vitiligo presented with two weeks of dizziness on exertion following pharyngitis which was treated with prednisone 40 mg by mouth once a day for five days. Initial workup revealed anemia, elevated lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), and low haptoglobin. He underwent workup for causes of hemolytic anemia which was remarkable for a peripheral blood smear with hypersegmented neutrophils and low vitamin B12 levels concerning for pernicious anemia. Parietal cell and intrinsic factor antibodies were negative, and he then underwent an esophagogastroduodenoscopy with biopsy. The biopsy was negative for Helicobacter pylori, and the immunohistochemical stains were suggestive of chronic atrophic gastritis. He was started on vitamin B12 1,000 mcg intramuscular injections daily. His hemoglobin, LDH, and haptoglobin normalized. Given the absence of the parietal cell antibody and intrinsic factor antibody, this is a rare case of seronegative pernicious anemia.


Blood ◽  
1967 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 777-784 ◽  
Author(s):  
SHULAMITH BAR-SHANY ◽  
VICTOR HERBERT

Abstract A newborn infant was found to have circulating maternal intrinsic factor antibody in the same titer as his 41 year old mother, who had had known pernicious anemia since age 33. At 11 days of age, no intrinsic factor was demonstrable in the infant’s gastric juice; whether this was related to the presence of serum IF antibody or was a variant of normal is not certain. At three months of age, the infant had B12 deficiency, manifested by a low serum B12 level and hypersegmentation of the nuclei of the neutrophilic leukocytes, but the gastric biopsy was normal, as was the intrinsic factor secretion. Maternal antibody to intrinsic factor was no longer present. These findings support the concepts that: (1) Intrinsic factor antibody may accelerate the development of B12 deficiency; (2) The antibody may not, of itself, produce any permanent gastric damage.


1970 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-77
Author(s):  
J. R. Kirkpatrick

AbstractGastric biopsy was performed on 107 dyspeptic patients over the age of 40 years. Varying degrees of atrophic gastritis were found in 65 per cent, the remainder having normal gastric mucosa. The incidence was lowest in those with duodenal ulcer, intestinal metaplasia not being found in any of this group.Hypochlorhydria was found in 77 per cent of those with atrophic gastritis and in 13 per cent of those with normal mucosa. The accuracy of barium meal, gastroscopy and gastric photography in discriminating between those with atrophic and those with normal gastric mucosa was less accurate.No significant haematological dilferences were found between the two groups of patients. Parietal cell antibodies were detected in the sera of 15 per cent of those cases with atrophic gastritis.


1968 ◽  
Vol 55 (5) ◽  
pp. 575-583 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Michael Samloff ◽  
Martin S. Kleinman ◽  
Michael D. Turner ◽  
Michael V. Sobel ◽  
Graham H. Jeffries

2008 ◽  
Vol 134 (4) ◽  
pp. A-478
Author(s):  
Edith Lahner ◽  
Gary L. Norman ◽  
Carola Severi ◽  
Susan B. Encabo ◽  
Zakera Shums ◽  
...  

2009 ◽  
Vol 104 (8) ◽  
pp. 2071-2079 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edith Lahner ◽  
Gary L Norman ◽  
Carola Severi ◽  
Susan Encabo ◽  
Zakera Shums ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 3603-3603
Author(s):  
Chaim Hershko ◽  
Aharon Ronson ◽  
Moshe Souroujon ◽  
Yzhak Maschler ◽  
Judith Heyd ◽  
...  

Abstract Because gastric acid secretion is critical for food iron absorption, iron deficiency is a known complication of the achlorhydria associated with pernicious anemia at presentation or following cobalamin (Cbl) treatment. In a previous study employing high serum gastrin and strongly positive antiparietal cell antibodies as a screening method for autoimmune atrophic gastritis, we have found a very high (27%) prevalence of atrophic gastritis among young subjects with iron deficiency anemia (IDA). The objectives of the present study were to explore the degree of overlap between patients presenting with atrophic gastritis and microcytic (MVC<80 fl) IDA on one hand, and those presenting with Cbl deficiency and normocytic (MCV 80–100 fl) or macrocytic (MCV>100 fl) anemia typical of pernicious anemia. Of 160 patients diagnosed with autoimmune gastritis presenting with iron, Cbl, or combined deficiency over the years 2001–2005, 83 presented with microcytic IDA, 48 with normocytic and 29 with macrocytic indices. Serum Cbl was abnormal in 100% of macrocytic, 92% of normocytic and 46% of microcytic subjects. IDA patients were 21 y younger (41 ±15 vs 62±15 y), predominantly female (78 vs 41%) and with a higher proportion of active H pylori infection (42 vs 21%). However, there were also marked similarities between all subgroups including a high prevalence of thyroid disease (20%) and diabetes (8%) known for their association with the autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome, and the rate of anti-intrinsic factor positivity was the highest (42% vs 31%) among IDA patients. Stratification by age cohorts from <20 to >60 y showed a very regular correlation, with progressive increase in MCV from 68±9 to 119±8 fl, serum ferritin from 4±2 to 37±41 μg/L, hypergastrinemia from 349±247 to 800±627 u/mL (normal 61±17), and a progressive decrease of Cbl from 392±179 in the youngest, to 108±65 pg/mL in the oldest age cohort. The prevalence of H pylori infection was 87.5% at age <20 y, 47% at 20–40 y, 37.5 % at 41–60 y and 12.5% at age > 60y implying a spontaneous elimination of H pylori by achlorhydria of increasing severity and duration. H pylori eradication by triple therapy in 24 patients resulted in a decrease in serum gastrin from 476±391 to 218±220 u/mL (paired t-test=0.00086) within 19± 12 months and complete remission of pernicious anemia in 2 patients. These findings challenge the common notion that pernicious anemia is a disease of the elderly manifested in megaloblastic anemia, and imply a disease starting many years before the establishment of clinical Cbl deficiency through an autoimmune mechanism directed against gastric parietal cells, likely triggered by H pylori by means of antigenic mimicry. Because of the added strain of young age and fertility on iron requirements, IDA may precede Cbl deficiency by many years until the crucial loss of remaining intrinsic factor in a proportion of patients terminating in typical pernicious anemia.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document