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Nursing
QUESTION #9267
Question 1
A 5-year-old child with thalassemia major requires a blood transfusion every 3–4 weeks. After 5 years of regular transfusions, the child develops bronze skin discoloration, hepatomegaly, growth retardation, and cardiac arrhythmias. The PRIMARY cause of these complications and its MANAGEMENT is:
Correct Answer Explanation
Beta-Thalassemia Major (Cooley's Anemia) — requires chronic blood transfusions leading to Iron Overload (Hemosiderosis/Hemochromatosis).
Mechanism:
\[\text{Each unit pRBC} \approx 200{-}250\,\text{mg iron}\]
Human body has no active iron excretion mechanism → iron accumulates in organs:
- Liver: Hepatomegaly, cirrhosis
- Heart: Cardiomyopathy, arrhythmias (leading cause of death in thalassemia)
- Endocrine glands: Diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism, hypogonadism, growth retardation
- Skin: Bronze discoloration
Monitoring: Serum ferritin (target \(<1000\,\mu\text{g/L}\)), MRI T2* (cardiac iron)
Iron Chelation Therapy:
| Drug | Route | Dose | Side Effects |
|---|---|---|---|
| Desferrioxamine (DFO) | SC (8–12 hr infusion) or IV | \(25{-}50\,\text{mg/kg/day}\) | Auditory/visual toxicity |
| Deferasirox (Exjade) | Oral | \(20{-}40\,\text{mg/kg/day}\) | GI upset, renal toxicity |
| Deferiprone | Oral | \(75\,\text{mg/kg/day}\) | Agranulocytosis |
Curative treatment: Bone marrow/hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
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