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Infection Due toYersinia enterocoliticain a Series of Patients with β‐Thalassemia: Incidence and Predisposing Factors
Author(s) -
Thomas V. Adamkiewicz,
Mati Berkovitch,
C. Krishnan,
Christina Polsinelli,
Dee Kermack,
Nancy F. Olivieri
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
clinical infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.44
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1537-6591
pISSN - 1058-4838
DOI - 10.1086/515025
Subject(s) - yersinia enterocolitica , medicine , incidence (geometry) , thalassemia , series (stratigraphy) , pediatrics , bacteria , genetics , paleontology , physics , optics , biology
Over 15 years, 14 patients with yersiniosis in two North American comprehensive thalassemia clinics (0.6 cases per 100 patient-years) presented with fever (100%), diarrhea (86%), right-lower-quadrant abdominal pain (71%), bacteremia (57%), a palpable abdominal mass (36%), and pharyngitis (28%). Clinically apparent infection occurred within 10 days of blood transfusion in 57% of patients. Nine patients (64%) had only a modest elevation in serum level of ferritin (< 2,000 micrograms/L). Patients with focal abdominal findings had a higher body iron burden, as estimated by the serum ferritin level, and significant intraabdominal suppurative complications. Two patients were not receiving iron-chelating therapy with deferoxamine; one patient was receiving the experimental chelator deferiprone (L1). Iron-loaded patients with beta-thalassemia are at greatly increased risk for severe yersiniosis, even when their body iron burden (as indicated by the serum ferritin level) is only moderately elevated and they are not receiving iron-chelating therapy with deferoxamine.

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