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Severe Nocturnal and Postexercise Hypoxia in Children and Adolescents with Sickle Cell Disease

Hypoxia is a common feature in children with sickle cell disease (SCD) that is inconsistently associated with painful crises and acute chest syndrome. To assess the prevalence and risk factors of hypoxia, we recorded daytime, nocturnal, and postexercise pulse oximetry (SpO(2)) values in 39 SCD patie...

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Autores principales: Halphen, Isabelle, Elie, Caroline, Brousse, Valentine, Le Bourgeois, Muriel, Allali, Slimane, Bonnet, Damien, de Montalembert, Mariane
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4039516/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24878576
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097462
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author Halphen, Isabelle
Elie, Caroline
Brousse, Valentine
Le Bourgeois, Muriel
Allali, Slimane
Bonnet, Damien
de Montalembert, Mariane
author_facet Halphen, Isabelle
Elie, Caroline
Brousse, Valentine
Le Bourgeois, Muriel
Allali, Slimane
Bonnet, Damien
de Montalembert, Mariane
author_sort Halphen, Isabelle
collection PubMed
description Hypoxia is a common feature in children with sickle cell disease (SCD) that is inconsistently associated with painful crises and acute chest syndrome. To assess the prevalence and risk factors of hypoxia, we recorded daytime, nocturnal, and postexercise pulse oximetry (SpO(2)) values in 39 SCD patients with a median age of 10.8 years. Median daytime SpO(2) was 97% (range, 89%–100%), and 36% of patients had daytime hypoxia defined as SpO(2)<96%. Median nocturnal SpO(2) was 94.7% (range, 87.7%–99.5%), 50% of patients had nocturnal hypoxia defined as SpO(2)≤93%, and 11(37%) patients spent more than 10% of their total sleep time with SpO(2)<90%. Median postexercise SpO(2) was 94% (range, 72%–100%) and 44.7% of patients had postexercise hypoxia defined as an SpO(2) decrease ≥3% after a 6-minute walk test. Among patients with normal daytime SpO(2), 35% had nocturnal and 42% postexercise hypoxia. Compared to 9 patients without daytime, nocturnal, or postexercise hypoxia, 25 patients with hypoxia under at least one of these three conditions had greater anemia severity (P = 0.01), lower HbF levels (P = 0.04), and higher aspartate aminotransferase levels (P = 0.03). Males predominated among patients with postexercise hypoxia (P = 0.004). Hypoxia correlated neither with painful crises nor with acute chest syndrome. Of 32 evaluable patients, 6 (18.8%) had a tricuspid regurgitation velocity ≥2.6 m/s, and this feature was associated with anemia (P = 0.044). Median percentage of the predicted distance covered during a 6-minute walk test was 86% [46–120]; the distance was negatively associated with LDH (P = 0.044) and with a past history of acute chest syndrome (P = 0.009). In conclusion, severe episodes of nocturnal and postexercise hypoxia are common in children with SCD, even those with normal daytime SpO(2).
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spelling pubmed-40395162014-06-02 Severe Nocturnal and Postexercise Hypoxia in Children and Adolescents with Sickle Cell Disease Halphen, Isabelle Elie, Caroline Brousse, Valentine Le Bourgeois, Muriel Allali, Slimane Bonnet, Damien de Montalembert, Mariane PLoS One Research Article Hypoxia is a common feature in children with sickle cell disease (SCD) that is inconsistently associated with painful crises and acute chest syndrome. To assess the prevalence and risk factors of hypoxia, we recorded daytime, nocturnal, and postexercise pulse oximetry (SpO(2)) values in 39 SCD patients with a median age of 10.8 years. Median daytime SpO(2) was 97% (range, 89%–100%), and 36% of patients had daytime hypoxia defined as SpO(2)<96%. Median nocturnal SpO(2) was 94.7% (range, 87.7%–99.5%), 50% of patients had nocturnal hypoxia defined as SpO(2)≤93%, and 11(37%) patients spent more than 10% of their total sleep time with SpO(2)<90%. Median postexercise SpO(2) was 94% (range, 72%–100%) and 44.7% of patients had postexercise hypoxia defined as an SpO(2) decrease ≥3% after a 6-minute walk test. Among patients with normal daytime SpO(2), 35% had nocturnal and 42% postexercise hypoxia. Compared to 9 patients without daytime, nocturnal, or postexercise hypoxia, 25 patients with hypoxia under at least one of these three conditions had greater anemia severity (P = 0.01), lower HbF levels (P = 0.04), and higher aspartate aminotransferase levels (P = 0.03). Males predominated among patients with postexercise hypoxia (P = 0.004). Hypoxia correlated neither with painful crises nor with acute chest syndrome. Of 32 evaluable patients, 6 (18.8%) had a tricuspid regurgitation velocity ≥2.6 m/s, and this feature was associated with anemia (P = 0.044). Median percentage of the predicted distance covered during a 6-minute walk test was 86% [46–120]; the distance was negatively associated with LDH (P = 0.044) and with a past history of acute chest syndrome (P = 0.009). In conclusion, severe episodes of nocturnal and postexercise hypoxia are common in children with SCD, even those with normal daytime SpO(2). Public Library of Science 2014-05-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4039516/ /pubmed/24878576 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097462 Text en © 2014 Halphen et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Halphen, Isabelle
Elie, Caroline
Brousse, Valentine
Le Bourgeois, Muriel
Allali, Slimane
Bonnet, Damien
de Montalembert, Mariane
Severe Nocturnal and Postexercise Hypoxia in Children and Adolescents with Sickle Cell Disease
title Severe Nocturnal and Postexercise Hypoxia in Children and Adolescents with Sickle Cell Disease
title_full Severe Nocturnal and Postexercise Hypoxia in Children and Adolescents with Sickle Cell Disease
title_fullStr Severe Nocturnal and Postexercise Hypoxia in Children and Adolescents with Sickle Cell Disease
title_full_unstemmed Severe Nocturnal and Postexercise Hypoxia in Children and Adolescents with Sickle Cell Disease
title_short Severe Nocturnal and Postexercise Hypoxia in Children and Adolescents with Sickle Cell Disease
title_sort severe nocturnal and postexercise hypoxia in children and adolescents with sickle cell disease
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4039516/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24878576
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097462
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