scholarly journals Evaluation of the Functions and Radiographic Severity of Osteonecrosis of the Head of Femur in South-west Nigeria

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 365-373
Author(s):  
LO Thanni ◽  
SA Gbadegesin

Background: Osteonecrosis of the femoral head is likely to be a complex of diseases rather than a single entity. In sub-Saharan Africa, epidemiological studies on the subject are uncommon. Objectives: To determine hip function, radiographic severity and other characteristics of patients with osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH) at presentation in a sub-Saharan Africa population Methods: A combined prospective clinical survey and retrospective chart review of patients was done. Results: Fifty hips in 44 patients were studied (29 retrospectively and 15 prospectively). The prevalence of ONFH was 1.6%. The mean age was 24.8±13.2 years. The lesion was unilateral in 86.4% and bilateral in 13.6% of the hips. Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) occurred in 43.2%, sickle cell trait in 13.6%, and 20.5% of cases were idiopathic. Overall, 12% of affected hips were presented early, and all the hips were painful at presentation. Of the 18 hips studied prospectively, 72.2% had necrosis >30% and >30% subchondral collapse in 61.1%. The mean combined necrotic angle was moderate size, 197o±29.7o and 177.2o±69.4o for the right and left hips, respectively (p = 0.8). The mean WOMAC scores were 37.2 ±17.4 for function, 10.2±4.3 for pain and 4.2±2.7 for stiffness. Conclusion: Patients with osteonecrosis of the femoral head tended to be young adults and those with SCD. The majority present with large-sized osteonecrosis and subchondral collapse but moderate hip pain and stiffness.

2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mudathir A. Adam ◽  
Nassreldeen K. Adam ◽  
Babiker A. Mohamed

Abstract Objective It is estimated that 50% to 90% of infants born with (SCA) in sub-Saharan Africa die before 5 years old. Northern Darfur State at western Sudan region has a multiethnic population with a high frequency of sickle cell anaemia, but little about it is published. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of sickle cell anaemia among children admitted to Al Fashir Teaching Hospital in Al Fashir, Northern Darfur State, Sudan. Results The prevalence of sickle cell disease by haemoglobin electrophoresis among these 400 children patients was 59 (14.8%). Sickle cell trait patients were 11.3% and Sickle cell disease positive patients were 3.5%. Individuals with SCA have consistently low blood Hb concentration, normal MCV and high mean WBC’s. Individuals with sickle cell trait had haematological parameters near to those of normal individuals.


2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 372-385 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael P. Okoh ◽  
Lukman A. Alli ◽  
Martti E.E. Tolvanen ◽  
Maxwell M. Nwegbu

Introduction: Nigeria has the largest burden of Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) with estimated 100,000 new born affected annually. SCD is a Hemoglobin (Hb) disorder with the major form resulting from the substitution of a polar glutamate (Glu) by non-polar Valine (Val) in an invariant region of Hbβ chain-subunit. Species of Hb found in the sickle cell trait are HbA and HbS in a 60:40 proportion, in SCD only HbS, in the HbC disease only HbC, and in the SC disease it's HbS and HbC in a 50:50 equal proportion. Objective: This paper reviews herbal medicines usage in sub-Saharan Africa (sSA) to ameliorate the crisis associated with SCD. The model Hb tetramer suggests a higher membrane affinity of HbS and HbC, promoting dehydration of RBCs, with concomitant in vivo crystallization. Some drawbacks using these herbal drugs include; poor bioavailability and the lack of proper pharmacovigilance monitoring procedures arising from weak governance structure combined with under reporting of herbal usage to physicians were discussed. Probable epigenetic loci that could be targeted using phytomedicines for effective SCD management were also discussed. Methods: Using search engines, several databases including Google scholar, PubMed, Academic Resource Index were utilized as a source for relevant publications/ literature. The protein coordinates for the Hb tetramer were obtained from the Protein Data Bank (PDB). Conclusion: Manipulation of epigenetics to achieve better SCD management involves careful thinking. Herein, we discuss some epigenetic interactions that could be putatively tweaked with a view of enhancing soluble bioactive small molecular components with the potential to reactivate γ -globin genes, thereby boosting immune response in patient with SCD.


Blood ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 130 (Suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 971-971
Author(s):  
Laure Alexandre ◽  
Dapa Diallo ◽  
Aissata Tolo ◽  
Saliou Diop ◽  
Ibrahima Sanogo ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Growth failure has been a well-known complication of sickle cell disease (SCD) since the 70s. More recent studies show that the proportion of underweight children with SCD has decreased significantly, thanks to modern treatments (in particular hydroxyurea and iterative transfusions), with a tendency towards overweight and even obesity. However, most studies have been carried out in high-income countries, while 80% of the affected children are born in sub-Saharan Africa, where the environment and the medical care are entirely different. We carried out a case-control study nested in a multinational African cohort to study the growth of sickle cell children and the possible factors influencing growth failure. Methods We performed a case-control transversal study nested in the CADRE cohort that includes SCD patients from five African countries: Cameroon, Gabon, Côte d'Ivoire, Mali and Senegal. All children aged 5 to 21 years-old from this cohort were included in our study. Healthy controls were recruited among the patients' siblings or the children of health workers from each center. The main parameters studied were: medical history, height, weight, blood pressure; hemoglobin phenotype (SS, Sβ0, SC or Sβ +); complete blood count; hemolysis markers (LDH and bilirubin); microalbuminuria; echocardiographic parameters. The primary endpoint was growth failure, defined as a weight, height or BMI below the 5th percentile of the WHO growth charts. We described the frequency of growth failure according to hemoglobin phenotype, age and sex. Then we assessed by multivariate logistic regression in two SCD phenotypic groups (SS or Sβ0 and SC or Sβ +) the association between growth failure and the biological characteristics or the history of SCD-related complications. Results 2296 patients (1799 SS, 114 Sβ0, 287 SC, 96 Sβ+ patients and 287 controls were enrolled in Cameroon (n=735), Ivory Coast (n=380), Gabon (n=298), Mali (n=589) and Senegal (n=581). Overall, 48% of the patients were male and their median [interquartile range] age was 12 [8-16] years-old. Growth failure was diagnosed in 51% of SS, 58% of Sβ0, 44% of SC, 38% of Sβ+patients and 32% of controls, with deeper underweight than linear growth retardation. Beyond the age of 18, the mean BMI of SCD patients was again similar to that of controls in girls, but remained lower in boys, whereas the mean height was similar to that of controls regardless of sex (Figures a to d). Growth failure was more frequent in boys than in girls and maximal between 13 and 16 years-old (Figures e and f). In univariate analysis, the prevalence of growth retardation was associated with the country (highest in Senegal, lowest in Cameroon), age, male sex, hemoglobin phenotype, levels of anemia and hemolysis (p <.0001 for all comparisons). After adjusting for age and the country, the prevalence of growth failure was significantly higher in SS-Sβ0 patients compared to controls (OR = 2.55 [1.83-3.56]) but not different between SC-Sβ+ patients and controls (1.35 [0.91-2.01]). In multivariate analysis, growth failure in SCD patients was positively associated with male sex (OR=1.89, 95%IC=1.56-2.28), [12-15] years age class (OR=2.31, 95%IC=1.75-3.07), SS or Sβ0 phenotypes (OR=2.06 and 2.27, 95%IC=1.26-3.36 and 1.22-4.21, respectively), icterus, leukocytes count, and microalbuminuria (OR = 1.4 [1.1-1.8]). It was negatively associated with parents' secondary or upper education, mean blood pressure and hemoglobin level (OR = 1.96 [1.55-2.47] for the first quartile of hemoglobin level vs others). No association was found between growth failure and the history of clinical SCD-related complications (osteonecrosis, leg ulcers, stroke, priapism, pulmonary hypertension defined by echocardiography and retinopathy). Conclusion In sub-Saharan Africa, growth failure occurs in more than half of the SCD children and concerns weight more than height. Its prevalence is particularly high in SS or Sβ0 patients and during adolescence, due to pubertal delay. Growth failure in SCD children is associated with male sex, anemia and high hemolysis markers independently of the hemoglobin phenotype, but is not independently associated with the occurrence of acute or chronic vascular complications of sickle cell disease, apart from microalbuminuria. However, the long-term consequences of growth failure in sickle cell disease should be evaluated in a longitudinal study. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Author(s):  
Umar Aminu Abdullah ◽  
Mohammed Bashir AbdulRahman ◽  
Bello Aminu ◽  
Abubakar Umar Musa ◽  
Isah Balarabe

Background: Sickle cell anaemia is a major public health problem in sub-Saharan Africa with high morbidities like bony alterations and bone fragility especially in those with vitamin D deficiency. There is paucity of research data on bone biomarkers in patients with sickle cell anaemia especially in Northern Nigeria. The aim of this study was to evaluate vitamin D in adult sickle cell anaemia patients at steady state. Materials and Methods: Seventy-seven patients with sickle cell anaemia and equal number of apparently healthy matched controls were recruited for the study. Various biochemical parameters of bone metabolism were measured. Data were analysed using IBM SPSS version 23.0. Results: The mean age of SCA adult patients and controls wer


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. LBA-3-LBA-3
Author(s):  
Ruth Nankanja ◽  
Charles Kiyaga ◽  
Mark Geisberg ◽  
Erik Serrao ◽  
Stephen Balyegyusa

Abstract Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) is a widely prevalent hemoglobinopathy in sub-Saharan Africa that is frequently deadly in early life, killing 70-80% of afflicted children before their fifth birthday. SCD accounts for ~20% of annual childhood deaths in Uganda - one of the first African countries surveyed for SCD prevalence. This health danger is currently addressable: prophylactic intervention programs including hydroxyurea, antibiotics, and immunizations have drastically reduced SCD mortality in developed areas and could be implemented in sub-Saharan Africa in a cost-effective manner. However, the cornerstone of such programs, newborn diagnostic screening, has not been widely implemented in Uganda, or elsewhere in Africa. This dilemma springs from the cost and logistical problems with accepted diagnostic methodologies, which require laboratory equipment, highly-trained operating personnel, uninterrupted electrical supply, and sample transport away from the point-of-care (POC). Clearly, a low-cost, low-complexity, POC diagnostic test for SCD could help diminish this public health crisis. HemoTypeSCTM is an inexpensive competitive lateral-flow immunoassay that uses monoclonal antibodies to detect hemoglobins (Hbs) A, S, and C in a 1.5-μL droplet of whole blood. In this study we conducted a field validation of HemoTypeSC accuracy in children of southeastern Uganda, aimed at providing evidence for the applicability of the test in widespread newborn screening programs in the region. This study was designed as a blinded, prospective diagnostic accuracy trial of HemoTypeSC as an investigational test compared to Hb electrophoresis as a reference method. Jinja Regional Referral Hospital was selected as a low-resource study center due to its relatively high daily patient volume, as well as its suitability as a prototype center for organized newborn SCD screening within Uganda. Exactly 1,000 children five years old and younger were prospectively recruited from the hospital wards and outpatient clinics. HemoTypeSC was compared to Hb electrophoresis for detection of the Hb phenotypes HbAA (normal), HbAS (sickle cell trait), and HbSS (SCD). Initial data analysis indicated that HemoTypeSC correctly identified 998 out of 1,000 phenotypes, for an overall accuracy of 99.8%. This included 720/720 (100%) specimens correctly identified as HbAA, 182/182 (100%) correctly identified as HbAS, and 96/98 (98%) correctly identified as HbSS. The two discordant samples were both identified as HbSS by electrophoresis and HbAS by HemoTypeSC. To resolve these discrepancies, the patients with the discordant HbSS/HbAS results were recalled for repeat testing. During the ensuing phone contact for scheduling, it was discovered that both individuals were in fact previously diagnosed with SCD, and both had been recently transfused. The previous diagnostic result reports for these participants were subsequently viewed and confirmed as HbSS. Because HbA was indeed present in the blood of these two patients at the time of sampling, the HbAS result was determined to be true. A secondary data analysis was therefore conducted, in which these two specimens were included as true positives for HbSS and true negatives for HbAS. It was ultimately determined that HemoTypeSC correctly identified 1,000 out of 1,000 phenotypes across all patients screened, including 96/96 HbSS specimens, for an overall sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of 100%. These results indicate that HemoTypeSC performs at least as accurately as the gold-standard method of Hb electrophoresis in detecting SCD and sickle cell trait at the POC in a resource-limited setting. This to our knowledge represents the first ever report of a rapid test for SCD displaying 100% sensitivity and specificity in a field validation study. In summary, HemoTypeSC represents a promising tool that can presently enable newborn and general population screening. Widespread combination of HemoTypeSC newborn and population screening programs with appropriate treatment, prophylaxis, and health counseling systems in countries most affected by the disease could save the lives of millions of children over the coming decades. A separate abstract regarding a HemoTypeSC field validation trial in Nigeria has also been submitted as a late-breaking abstract. We would be open to sharing a presentation slot with this group. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Author(s):  
Arafa Said Salim ◽  
Emmy Mwita ◽  
Joseph Sarfo Antwi ◽  
Olamide Agunkejoye ◽  
Paul Mdliva

2017 ◽  
Vol 121 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Adebayo C Atanda ◽  
Yahya Aliyu ◽  
Oluwafunmilayo Atanda ◽  
Aliyu Babadoko ◽  
Aisha Suleiman ◽  
...  

Introduction: Anemia has been implicated in heart failure. Existing literatures, involving predominantly African-Americans, suggests that Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) maybe linked to various cardiovascular complications including pulmonary hypertension and left venticular dysfunction. Peculiarly, our study involves exclusively Sub-Saharan population. Method: We conducted a cross sectional observational study of 208 hydroxyurea-naive consecutive SCD patients aged 10-52 years at steady state and 94 healthy non-matched controls who were studied in an out patient clinic in Sub-Saharan Africa. SCD patients were required to have electrophoretic or liquid chromatography documentation of major sickling phenotypes. Control group was required to have non-sickling phenotypes. Cardiac measurements were performed with TransThoracic Echo according to American Society of Echocardiography guidelines. Hemoglobin level was also obtained. Results: Hemoglobin level in SCD group (8.5+/- 1.5) was significant (P<0.001) compared to control (13.8+/- 1.7). Although SCD group had significantly higher values of left ventricular (LV) size, there was no qualitative evidence of LV dysfunction. SCD group had higher values of Ejection Fraction but not statistically significant. There was no evidence of LV wall stiffening to impair proper filling in SCD group, with the ratio of early to late ventricular filling velocities, E/A ratio elevated (1.7+/-0.4 compared to 1.6+/- 0.4; P=0.010). Right ventricular systolic pressure was determined using the formula of 4x Tricuspid Reugurgitant jet (TRV) square as an indirect measurement of Pulmonary arterial systolic pressure. SCD patients had significantly higher mean±SD values for tricuspid regurgitant jet velocity than did the controls (2.1±0.6 vs. 1.8±0.5; p= 0.001). Within the SCD group, there was no clear pattern of worsening diastolic function with increased TRV. Furthermore, E/A had a significant positive relationship with jet velocity in bivariate analysis (R=0.20; P=0.013). Conclusions: We were unable to demonstrate existence of anemia-associated left ventricular dysfunction in Sub-Saharan African with SCD. Further studies is required to highlight the reason behind this finding.


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