Cardiac iron and cardiac disease in males and females with transfusion-dependent thalassemia major: a T2* magnetic resonance imaging study
- 12 January 2011
- journal article
- Published by Ferrata Storti Foundation (Haematologica) in Haematologica
- Vol. 96 (4), 515-520
- https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2010.025510
Abstract
Background. It has been repeatedly reported that female patients with thalassemia major survive longer than males and that the difference is due to a lower rate of cardiac disease in females. Design and Methods. We compared the cardiac iron load as measured by magnetic resonance imaging T2* in 776 patients (370 males) examined at the National Research Council as part of an Italian cooperative study. We also established normal left ventricular ejection fraction values for our population. Results. Prevalence of cardiac disease was higher in males compared to females (105 males vs 69 females; p <0.0001). Cardiac T2* was significantly lower in patients with heart dysfunction (p <0.0001), but no difference was observed according to sex. Twenty males and 5 females had a history of cardiac arrhythmias. Their cardiac T2* was not significantly lower than that of patients without arrhythmias (24 ms vs 26 ms; p=0.381), nor was there a difference between sexes. Liver T2* was significanntly lower in male and female patients with heart dysfunction compared to those without. Ferritin levels were higher in patients of both sexes with heart dysfunction without significant differences between males and females Conclusions. Males and females are at the same risk of accumulating iron in their hearts, but females tolerate iron toxicity better, possibly as an effect of reduced sensitivity to chronic oxidative stressThis publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
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