Thalassemia major or Beta Thalassemia
The thalassemias are a group of genetically (inherited) blood disorders that share in common one feature; the defective production of hemoglobin which is the protein that enables red blood cells to carry and deliver oxygen. There are many different mechanisms of defective hemoglobin synthesis and, hence, many types of thalassemia.
Beta Thalassemia is caused by an absence or decreased synthesis of the beta globin chains of hemoglobin. Individuals with beta thalassemia trait or beta thalassemia minor are heterozygous for beta thalassemia, or simply a carrier of beta-thalassemia. Individuals with beta thalassemia major are homozygous for beta-thalassemia and thus have two copies of the defective gene and develop the disease: thalassemia major. The complete absence of the gene is described as β0 thalassemia and reduced synthesis as β+. The decrease in beta-globin leads to a relative excess in α globin chains.
# 613985 BETA-THALASSEMIA
ORPHA:231214 Beta-thalassemia major
June 2017 Soroya Beacher, Oscar Netherlands
As chairman of the sickle cell organization in the Netherlands, a trained ICU nurse, and nurse tutor this has given...
- Bone marrow expansion and cortical thinning
- Hemochromatosis
- Hemoglobinopathies
- Splenomegaly in hemoglobinopathies