Mammen Puliyel
Children's Hospital Los Angeles
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Featured researches published by Mammen Puliyel.
American Journal of Hematology | 2013
Vasilios Berdoukas; Anne Nord; Susan Carson; Mammen Puliyel; Thomas Hofstra; John C. Wood; Thomas D. Coates
Chronic blood transfusions start at a very young age in subjects with transfusion‐dependent anemias, the majority of whom have hereditary anemias. To understand how rapidly iron overload develops, we retrospectively reviewed 308 MRIs for evaluation of liver, pancreatic, or cardiac iron in 125 subjects less than 10 years old. Median age at first MRI evaluation was 6.0 years. Median liver iron concentrations in patients less than 3.5 years old were 14 and 13 mg/g dry weight in thalassemia major (TM) and Diamond–Blackfan anemia (DBA) patients, respectively. At time of first MRI, pancreatic iron was markedly elevated (> 100 Hz) in DBA patients, and cardiac iron ( R2* >50 Hz) was present in 5/112 subjects (4.5%), including a 2.5 years old subject with DBA. Five of 14 patients (38%) with congenital dyserythropoietic anemia (CDA) developed excess cardiac iron before their 10th birthday. Thus, clinically significant hepatic and cardiac iron accumulation occurs at an early age in patients on chronic transfusions, particularly in those with ineffective or absent erythropoiesis, such as DBA, CDA, and TM, who are at higher risk for iron cardiomyopathy. Performing MRI for iron evaluation in the liver, heart, and pancreas as early as feasible, particularly in those conditions in which there is suppressed bone marrow activity is very important in the management of iron loaded children in order to prescribe appropriate chelation to prevent long‐term sequelae. Am. J. Heamtol. 88:E283–E285, 2013.
American Journal of Hematology | 2014
Mammen Puliyel; Richard Sposto; Vasilios Berdoukas; Thomas Hofstra; Anne Nord; Susan Carson; John C. Wood; Thomas D. Coates
Ferritin levels and trends are widely used to manage iron overload and assess the efficacy of prescribed iron chelation in patients with transfusional iron loading. A retrospective cohort study was conducted in 134 patients with transfusion‐dependent anemia, over a period of up to 9 years. To determine whether the trends in ferritin adequately reflect the changes in total body iron, changes in ferritin between consecutive liver iron measurements by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were compared to changes in liver iron concentrations (LIC), a measure of total body iron. The time period between two consecutive LIC measurements was defined as a segment. Trends in ferritin were considered to predict the change in LIC within a segment if the change in one parameter was less than twofold that of the other, and was in the same direction. Using the exclusion criteria detailed in methods, the trends in ferritin were compared to changes in LIC in 358 segments. An agreement between ferritin trends and LIC changes was found in only 38% of the 358 segments examined. Furthermore, the change in ferritin was in opposite direction to that of LIC in 26% of the segments. Trends in ferritin were a worse predictor of changes in LIC in sickle cell disease than in thalassemia (P < 0.01). While ferritin is a convenient measure of iron status; ferritin trends were unable to predict changes in LIC in individual patients. Ferritin trends need to be interpreted with caution and confirmed by direct measurement of LIC. Am. J. Hematol. 89:391–394, 2014.
American Journal of Hematology | 2014
Antonella Meloni; Mammen Puliyel; Alessia Pepe; Vasili Berdoukas; Thomas D. Coates; John C. Wood
Chronically transfused sickle cell disease (SCD) patients have lower risk of myocardial iron overload (MIO) than comparably transfused thalassemia major (TM) patients. However, cardioprotection is incomplete. We present the clinical characteristics of six patients who have prospectively developed MIO, to identify potential risk factors for cardiac iron accumulation. From 2002 to 2011, cardiac, hepatic, and pancreatic iron overload were assessed by R2 and R2* magnetic resonance imaging techniques in 201 chronic transfused SCD patients as part of their clinical care. At the time, they developed MIO, five of six patients had been on chronic transfusion for more than 11 years; only one was on exchange transfusion. The time to MIO was correlated with reticulocyte and hemoglobin S percentages. All patients had qualitatively poor chelation compliance (<50%). All patients had serum ferritin levels >4600 ng/ml and liver iron concentration >22 mg/g. Pancreatic R2* was >100 Hz in every patient studied (5/6). Cardiac iron rose proportionally to pancreas R2*, with all patients having pancreas R2*>100 Hz when cardiac iron was present. MIO had a threshold relationship with liver iron that was higher than observed in TM patients. In conclusion, MIO occurs in a small percentage of chronically transfused SCD patients and is only associated with exceptionally poor control of total body iron stores. Duration of chronic transfusion is clearly important but other factors, such as levels of effective erythropoiesis, appear to contribute to cardiac risk. Pancreas R2* can serve as a valuable screening tool for cardiac iron in SCD patients. Am. J. Hematol. 89:678–683, 2014.
American Journal of Hematology | 2017
Maha Khaleel; Mammen Puliyel; Payal Shah; John Sunwoo; Roberta M. Kato; Patjanaporn Chalacheva; Jon Detterich; John C. Wood; J. Tsao; Lonnie K. Zeltzer; Richard Sposto; Michael C. K. Khoo; Thomas D. Coates
The painful vaso‐occlusive crises (VOC) that characterize sickle cell disease (SCD) progress over hours from the asymptomatic steady‐state. SCD patients report that VOC can be triggered by stress, cold exposure, and, pain itself. We anticipated that pain could cause neural‐mediated vasoconstriction, decreasing regional blood flow and promoting entrapment of sickle cells in the microvasculature. Therefore, we measured microvascular blood flow in the fingers of both hands using plethysmography and laser‐Doppler flowmetry while applying a series of painful thermal stimuli on the right forearm in 23 SCD patients and 25 controls. Heat pain applied to one arm caused bilateral decrease in microvascular perfusion. The vasoconstriction response started before administration of the thermal pain stimulus in all subjects, suggesting that pain anticipation also causes significant vasoconstriction. The time delay between thermal pain application and global vasoconstriction ranged from 5 to 15.5 seconds and increased with age (P < .01). Although subjective measures, pain threshold and pain tolerance were not different between SCD subjects and controls, but the vaso‐reactivity index characterizing the microvascular blood flow response to painful stimuli was significantly higher in SCD patients (P = .0028). This global vasoconstriction increases microvascular transit time, and may promote entrapment of sickle cells in the microvasculature, making vaso‐occlusion more likely. The rapidity of the global vasoconstriction response indicates a neural origin that may play a part in the transition from steady‐state to VOC, and may also contribute to the variability in VOC frequency observed in SCD patients.
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2015
Mammen Puliyel; Arch G. Mainous; Vasilios Berdoukas; Thomas D. Coates
Blood | 2015
Maha Khaleel; Mammen Puliyel; John Sunwoo; Payal Shah; Roberta M. Kato; Patjanaporn Chalacheva; John C. Wood; J. Tsao; Lonnie K. Zeltzer; Richard Sposto; Michael Khoo; Thomas D. Coates
Blood | 2013
Mammen Puliyel; Alessia Pepe; Massimo Lombardi; Vasilios Berdoukas; Thomas D. Coates; John C. Wood
Blood | 2011
Mammen Puliyel; Adam Bush; Vasilios Berdoukas; Thomas Hofstra; Susan Claster; Bhakti Mehta; Anne Nord; Susan Carson; Tatiana Hernandez; Ani Dongelyan; John C. Wood; Thomas D. Coates
The Journal of Pain | 2014
Mammen Puliyel; M. Tang; P. Chalacheva; Adam Bush; Roberta M. Kato; J. Ly; Anne Nord; J. Tsao; Lonnie K. Zeltzer; M. Khoo; John C. Wood; Thomas D. Coates
Blood | 2011
Vasilios Berdoukas; Mammen Puliyel; Adam Bush; Thomas Hofstra; Bhakti Mehta; Anne Nord; Susan Carson; Tatiana Hernandez; Ani Dongelyan; John C. Wood; Thomas D. Coates