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Comment
. 2016;135(4):200-7.
doi: 10.1159/000442193. Epub 2016 Jan 28.

Benign Cardiac Effects of Hemoglobin H Disease

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Comment

Benign Cardiac Effects of Hemoglobin H Disease

Claire Sheeran et al. Acta Haematol. 2016.

Abstract

Background/aims: Hemoglobin H (HbH) disease is associated with iron overload, but whether this results in serious cardiac or vascular sequelae is unresolved.

Methods: We identified 39 adult subjects (age 42 ± 12 years, 13 men) with HbH disease who had undergone echocardiography, 27 of whom had also undergone cardiac and liver magnetic resonance assessment of iron loading using T2*-weighted imaging.

Results: None of the subjects had a history of heart failure or arrhythmias. There were 13/39 subjects with a ferritin level within the sex-based normal range and only 4/39 had ferritin >1,000 ng/ml. Left ventricular (LV) and left atrial dilatation was common, but LV ejection fraction was normal (≥55%) in all subjects. Age was positively correlated with log ferritin in the 27 nontransfused subjects (r = 0.43) and was inversely correlated with the transmitral E wave and E/A ratio (r = -0.69 and r = -0.79, respectively), but no relation of log ferritin with E or E/A was evident. The peak tricuspid regurgitation velocity was normal in 24/29 subjects for whom this was obtained, and it was no more than mildly elevated in the other 5. None of the tested subjects had an abnormal cardiac T2* reading, but half had evidence of liver iron loading.

Conclusion: No myocardial iron loading or serious cardiac or vascular sequelae were identified in this cohort with HbH disease.

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