Vaso-occlusion in children with sickle cell disease: clinical characteristics and biologic correlates

Vaso-occlusive pain is a frequent manifestation of sickle cell disease, but most clinical studies have documented only those pain episodes for which patients seek acute care or require hospitalization. Based on limited previous studies, the authors suggest that pain episodes managed at home are more...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of pediatric hematology/oncology 2004-12, Vol.26 (12), p.785-790
Hauptverfasser: Dampier, Carlton, Setty, B N Yamaja, Eggleston, Barry, Brodecki, Darcy, O'neal, Patricia, Stuart, Marie
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container_end_page 790
container_issue 12
container_start_page 785
container_title Journal of pediatric hematology/oncology
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creator Dampier, Carlton
Setty, B N Yamaja
Eggleston, Barry
Brodecki, Darcy
O'neal, Patricia
Stuart, Marie
description Vaso-occlusive pain is a frequent manifestation of sickle cell disease, but most clinical studies have documented only those pain episodes for which patients seek acute care or require hospitalization. Based on limited previous studies, the authors suggest that pain episodes managed at home are more frequent then those resulting in acute care management but likely share a common pathophysiology. The authors determined the characteristics of vaso-occlusive pain managed at home in 30 subjects (ages 6-19 years) using a self-report diary daily for 6 months. A total of 175 pain episodes were reported in 4,885 days, with 51% lasting 1 day or less. Severe pain, rated as 7 to 10 on a 10-point scale, was reported on 12% of pain days, but most pain was of mild to moderate intensity. A combination of baseline hematologic parameters and biomarkers assessing erythrocyte/endothelial cell adhesion, including hematocrit, fetal hemoglobin, and adhesion ratio, were statistically significant predictors of pain frequency in statistical analyses. Given the overlap in clinical features and predictive hematologic parameters of home-managed and acute care-managed pain, both likely represent a continuum of frequency and severity rather than distinct clinical entities. The higher frequency of these home-managed episodes suggests their potential utility as additional outcome measures in studies of vaso-occlusive pain.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Anemia, Sickle Cell - complications
Biomarkers - analysis
Cell Adhesion
Child
Constriction, Pathologic
Erythrocytes - physiology
Female
Home Care Services
Humans
Male
Pain - etiology
Pain - physiopathology
Pain Management
Pain Measurement
Peripheral Vascular Diseases - complications
Peripheral Vascular Diseases - etiology
Peripheral Vascular Diseases - pathology
title Vaso-occlusion in children with sickle cell disease: clinical characteristics and biologic correlates
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