Joanne S Morris
University of the West Indies
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The Journal of Pediatrics | 1992
Beni N Balkaran; Gurendra Char; Joanne S Morris; Peter Thomas; Beryl E Serjeant; Graham R Serjeant
Strokes occurred in 17 of 310 children with homozygous sickle cell disease who were followed from birth, representing an incidence of 7.8% by the age of 14 years. Two children had subarachnoid hemorrhage, one having resolution of symptoms after aneurysm surgery and another dying of a presumed second hemorrhage 14 days later. The remaining 15 strokes were presumed to be cerebral infarction, although autopsy, angiographic, or computed tomographic evidence was available in only 8 children. There were 6 deaths, 2 in the acute event and 4 after recurrence, which occurred in 6 (46%) of 13 patients who survived the initial episode. There were 10 recurrent episodes at a median interval of 9 months after the initial event. Steady-state hematologic data revealed significantly higher leukocyte counts than in control subjects without strokes at age 1 year and in the last study preceding the stroke. The initial stroke coincided with an acutely lowered hemoglobin value in 5 patients (3 aplastic crises, 1 acute splenic sequestration, 1 probable pulmonary sequestration) and with painful crises in another 7 patients. We conclude that a high leukocyte count and an acute decrease of hemoglobin are risk factors for stroke in patients with homozygous sickle cell disease.
British Journal of Haematology | 1994
Graham R Serjeant; C.D. Ceulaer; R. Lethbridge; Joanne S Morris; Aneesh B. Singhal; Peter Thomas
The details of onset, perceived precipitating factors, associated symptoms, and pain distribution in the painful crisis of homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease have been prospectively recorded in 183 painful crises in 118 patients admitted to a day‐care centre in Kingston, Jamaica. Painful crises developed most frequently between 3 p.m. and midnight, most commonly affected patients aged 15‐29 years, affected the sexes equally, and were not obviously influenced by menstrual cycle. Of the perceived precipitating factors, skin cooling occurred in 34%, emotional stress in 10%, physical exertion in 7%, and pregnancy in 5% of women of child‐bearing age. Cold as a precipitant was not less common in patients with more subcutaneous fat. Pain affected the lumbar spine in 49%, abdomen in 32%, femoral shaft in 30%, and knees in 21%. There was a highly significant excess of bilateral involvement in limb and rib pain. Recurrent painful crises occurred in 40 patients but showed no evidence of involving similar sites on successive occasions. Abdominal painful crises were associated with abdominal distention in 18 (31%) and with referred rib pain in a further 15 (26%) of crises. Fever was common even in apparently uncomplicated painful crises, suggesting that fever is characteristic of the painful crisis itself and not necessarily indicative of infection. Following investigation and treatment in a day‐care centre, over 90% of patients returned home.
British Journal of Haematology | 1991
M. A. Padmos; K. Sackey; G. T. Roberts; Andreas E. Kulozik; S. Bail; Joanne S Morris; Beryl E Serjeant; G. R. Serjeant
Haematological, clinical and some molecular genetic features of homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease in Saudi Arabia have been compared in 33 patients from the Eastern Province (Eastern) and 30 from the South Western Province (Western). Eastern patients all had the Asian beta globin haplotype whereas Western patients were more variable but predominantly of the Benin haplotype. Eastern patients had more deletional alpha thalassaemia, higher total haemoglobin and fetal haemoglobin levels, and lower HbA2, mean cell volume, reticulocytes, and platelet counts. Clinically, Eastern patients had a greater persistence of splenomegaly, a more normal body build and greater subscapular skin fold thickness, and Western patients had more dactylitis and acute chest syndrome. Painful crises and avascular necrosis of the femoral head were common and occurred equally in both groups. The disease in the Eastern province has many mild features consistent with the higher HbF levels and more frequent alpha thalassaemia but bone pathology (painful crises, avascular necrosis of the femoral head, osteomyelitis) remains common. The disease in the West is more severe consistent with the Benin haplotype suggesting an African origin.
Archives of Disease in Childhood | 1992
K Bailey; Joanne S Morris; Peter Thomas; Graham R Serjeant
The relevance of fetal haemoglobin (HbF) concentration to the development of early clinical manifestations of homozygous sickle (SS) disease has been investigated by examining the time to first occurrence and the proportional hazard of these complications in three groups of the HbF distribution at age 5 years. HbF was significantly related to dactylitis, painful crises, acute chest syndrome, and acute splenic sequestration. The relationship suggested that a critically low HbF concentration increased the risk, little difference in risk occurring between the medium and high HbF groups. The abdominal painful crisis and hypersplenism were not related to HbF concentration suggesting that the degree of sickling may not be important in their genesis. Parental education on acute splenic sequestration should be focused on children with HbF concentrations in the lowest part of the HbF distribution for age.
British Journal of Ophthalmology | 1990
Peter D Fox; David Dunn; Joanne S Morris; Graham R Serjeant
The prevalence, incidence, and risk factors associated with proliferative sickle retinopathy (PSR) were investigated in 786 patients with homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease and 533 patients with sickle cell haemoglobin C (SC) disease. PSR was more common in SC disease, in which there was a significant predominance of males, and it increased with age in both genotypes. In SC disease the risk of developing PSR was highest between 15 and 24 years in males, between 20 and 39 years in females, and in SS disease between 25 and 39 years in both sexes. PSR tended to be bilateral, especially in SC disease. There was no evidence of familial clustering of PSR in SC siblings, and insufficient numbers of SS siblings were available to test for clustering. Haematological risk factors associated with PSR in SS disease were a high haemoglobin in males and a low fetal haemoglobin in both sexes and in SC disease, a high mean cell volume, and a low fetal haemoglobin in females.
The Lancet | 1990
J. Christakis; H. Hassapopoulou; M. Papadopoulou; K. Mandraveli; N. Vavatsi; Dimitris Loukopoulos; Joanne S Morris; Beryl E Serjeant; G. R. Serjeant
The clinical and haematological features of homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease were compared in 30 Greek and 310 Jamacian patients. Deletional alpha-thalassaemia, which modifies SS disease, is rare among Greek patients, so only Jamacian patients with four alpha-globin genes were included in the control group. Greek patients had higher total haemoglobin concentration and red cell counts, and lower mean cell haemoglobin concentration (MCHC) and reticulocyte counts. They also had a more normal body build and more adults had persistent splenomegaly. Fewer had a history of leg ulceration or priapism but more reported acute chest syndrome. The comparatively mild disease in Greek patients is consistent with less haemolysis and sickling and therefore less bone marrow expansion. In the absence of amelioriating factors such as high HbF concentration or alpha-thalassaemia, these findings may be explained by the low MCHC.
British Journal of Haematology | 1991
Joanne S Morris; David Dunn; Marjorie Beckford; Yvonne G Grandison; Karlene P Mason; Douglas R. Higgs; Karel De Ceulaer; Beryl E Serjeant; Graham R Serjeant
Haematological indices have been studied in 181 patients with homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease aged 40–73 years. Cross‐sectional analyses in 5‐year age bands indicated age‐related decreases in HbF (males only), total haemoglobin and platelet counts. Longitudinal studies within individuals confirmed the downward age‐related trend in haemoglobin and platelets and also revealed a falling reticulocyte count, most significant when expressed as absolute values. Total nucleated cells also fell although the decline was significant only in females. These observations are consistent with a progressive bone marrow failure which is not explained by the commonly occurring renal impairment in older SS patients since the changes persisted in analyses confined to patients with normal creatinine levels. The mechanism of this bone marrow failure is currently unknown.
Archives of Disease in Childhood | 1996
Atul Singhal; Joanne S Morris; Peter Thomas; George J. Dover; Douglas R. Higgs; Graham R Serjeant
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the role of haematological indices, socioeconomic status, and morbidity in prepubertal growth in homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease. METHOD: Height, weight, and haematology were serially recorded in a cohort study of 315 children with SS disease from birth to 9 years at the sickle cell clinic of the University Hospital of the West Indies, Kingston, Jamaica. RESULTS: Height increment between 3 and 9 years correlated positively with total haemoglobin at age 7 years in boys but not girls. Attained height and weight at age 7 years correlated positively with haemoglobin and fetal haemoglobin in boys but not girls. Only the correlation between haemoglobin and weight showed a significant gender difference. Partial correlation analysis suggested that the effect of haemoglobin was accounted for by the effect of fetal haemolglobin and further analysis indicated that height correlated with F reticulocyte count (a measure of fetal haemoglobin production) in both sexes but not with the ratio of F cells to F reticulocytes (a measure of F cell enrichment). Growth was not significantly related to mean red cell volume, proportional reticulocyte count, alpha thalassaemia, socioeconomic status, or morbidity. CONCLUSION: A high concentration of fetal haemoglobin in boys with SS disease is associated with greater linear growth. It is postulated that in boys, low concentrations of fetal haemoglobin increase haemolysis and hence metabolic requirements for erythropoiesis, putting them at greater risk of poor growth. Differences in the relationship of haematology and growth between boys and girls with SS disease dictate that future analyses of growth take gender into account.
Archives of Disease in Childhood | 1990
David R. J Readett; Joanne S Morris; Graham R Serjeant
The determinants of nocturnal enuresis in homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease have been investigated in 16 enuretic and 16 age and sex matched non-enuretic children. Overnight fluid deprivation tests (8pm-8am) demonstrated no significant difference in maximum urine osmolality or urine volumes, although the latter tended to be higher in the enuretic children. Maximum functional bladder capacity, estimated by maximum voided volume during oral fluid loading, was lower and the ratio of overnight urine volume to maximum functional bladder capacity higher in the enuretic than the non-enuretic group. Enuretic children were more likely than non-enuretics to be considered deep sleepers by their family. High urine volumes may contribute to nocturnal enuresis in SS disease, although the similar values in enuretic and non-enuretic children implies that additional factors determine the presence of enuresis. Low maximum functional bladder capacity, and a high ratio of overnight urine volume to maximum functional bladder capacity, appear to be important determinants.
British Journal of Haematology | 1991
J. Christakis; N. Vavatsi; H. Hassapopoulou; M. Angeloudi; M. Papadopoulou; Dimitris Loukopoulos; Joanne S Morris; Beryl E Serjeant; G. R. Serjeant
Haematological and clinical characteristics have been examined in 30 patients with homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease, 28 with sickle cell‐beta° thalassaemia, and 21 with sickle cell‐beta+ thalassaemia. The latter could be divided into three groups on their molecular basis and HbA levels, four subjects with an IVS‐2 nt 745 mutation having 34% HbA (designated Sbeta+ thalassaemia type I), 14 subjects with an IVS‐1 nt 110 mutation having 8–15% HbA (designated Sbeta+ thalassaemia type 11). and three subjects with an IVS–1 nt 6 mutation having 20–25% HbA (designated Sbeta+ thalassaemia type III). Comparisons were conducted between SS disease, Sbeta° thalassaemia, and Sbeta+ thalassaemia type II. Compared to SS disease, both thalassaemia syndromes had higher HbAr levels and red cell counts and lower mean cell haemoglobin content (MCHC), mean cell volume (MCV) and MCH, and Sbeta° thalassaemia had higher HbF and reticulocyte counts. Compared to Sbeta° thalassaemia. Sbeta+ thalassaemia had a higher haemoglobin and MCHC. Clinically, persistence of splenomegaly was more common in Sbeta° and Sbeta+ thalassaemia type II compared to SS disease. Few significant differences occurred between SS disease, Sbeta° and Sbeta+ thalassaemia type II in Northern Greece suggesting that the 8–15% HbA in the latter condition was insufficient to modify the clinical course.