Silent bleeding in children and adolescents with immune thrombocytopenia: relation to laboratory parameters and health related quality of life
Autor: | Nayera H K Elsherif, Khaled A Aboulfotouh, Ahmed E Hassan, Mahmoud Adel Kenny, Azza A.G. Tantawy, Marwa E Kabil |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Pediatrics Adolescent Hemorrhage Disease 030204 cardiovascular system & hematology Risk Assessment 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Risk Factors hemic and lymphatic diseases Internal medicine Surveys and Questionnaires medicine Humans 030212 general & internal medicine Microscopic hematuria Child Subclinical infection Hematuria Health related quality of life Purpura Thrombocytopenic Idiopathic Hematology business.industry Fecal occult blood Age Factors Retinal Hemorrhage Occult Immune thrombocytopenia Cross-Sectional Studies Child Preschool Occult Blood Asymptomatic Diseases Quality of Life Egypt Female Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine business Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage Intracranial Hemorrhages |
Zdroj: | Journal of thrombosis and thrombolysis. 50(2) |
ISSN: | 1573-742X |
Popis: | Occult hemorrhage can occur in any internal organ in ITP patients. Four sites of occult hemorrhage require attention including microscopic hematuria, fecal occult blood loss, retinal hemorrhage, and silent intracranial hemorrhage. The aim of this study was to investigate the frequency of subclinical bleeding in children with ITP and its relation to clinical and laboratory disease parameters including bleeding score and health related quality of life. This cross-sectional study included 40 ITP patients recruited from the Pediatric Hematology/Oncology unit, Children’s Hospital, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt. Inclusion criteria were patients with ITP (acute, persistent or chronic) having platelet count of 20,000/cmm or less at diagnosis/relapse, patients with overt bleeding and patients with secondary ITP were excluded. Occult blood in stools and urine analysis, fundus examination, and non-contrast brain MRI for microbleeds were done. Out of the forty included patients, 24 had chronic, 11 had acute and 5 had persistent ITP. Eleven patients had occult bleeds. Two patients had occult blood in stools, five had microscopic hematuria, one had retinal bleeds and three patients had brain microbleeds. Their mean age was 10.23 ± 4.18 years and their mean initial bleeding score was 2.55 ± 0.82. Nine patients with occult bleeding were chronic, one persistent and one acute ITP patients. There were no significant differences between patients with occult bleeding and those without as regards the initial bleeding score, platelet counts and hemoglobin level, as well as the mean platelet counts and mean hemoglobin level over the disease duration (p > 0.5). The scoring of the parent’s life, Child and parents’ quality of life was low in 3 out of 11 patients with occult bleeding. There was no significant difference between patients with occult bleeding and those without as regards the ITP child and parents’ quality of life items (p = 0.850 and 0.511 respectively). Our results suggest that subclinical bleeding is a potential risk in children with ITP, more commonly chronic ITP patients. We could not demonstrate a significant relation of occult bleeding to the laboratory findings, bleeding score, and the ITP health quality of life; nevertheless, the significance of the routine assessment of occult bleeding in ITP and the identification of high-risk patients require additional studies. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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