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A cross-sectional study of the clinical profile and aetiological spectrum of pancytopenia in a tertiary care centre.
Singapore Med J. 2010 Oct; 51(10):806-12.SM

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Pancytopenia is a common haematological problem. It is suspected when a patient presents with anaemia, prolonged fever and a bleeding tendency. Pancytopenia has multiple causes, but the frequency of these causes has been reported in a limited number of studies. The present study was conducted to assess the aetiological pattern, clinical profile and bone marrow morphology of pancytopenia patients.

METHODS

A total of 111 adult pancytopenia patients aged 13 to 65 years were studied during a one-year period to determine their clinical features, peripheral blood pictures and bone marrow morphologies. The aetiological pattern was assessed through the relevant investigations in the respective patients.

RESULTS

45.95 percent of the pancytopenic patients had a hypocellular marrow, while 54.05 percent had normocellular or hypercellular marrow. Idiopathic aplastic anaemia (20.72 percent) was the commonest cause of pancytopenia, followed by hypersplenism due to chronic liver disease (11.71 percent). Other important causes were kala-azar (nine percent), megaloblastic anaemia, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), infections and drug inducement. Infections such as kala-azar, falciparum malaria and enteric fever, megaloblastic anaemia as well as SLE were found to be treatable and reversible causes of pancytopenia.

CONCLUSION

As a large number of pancytopenic patients have a reversible aetiology, early and proper diagnosis may be life-saving.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Medicine, Medical College and Hospital Kolkata, 88 College Street, Kolkata 700073, India. g.santra@yahoo.comNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

21103817

Citation

Santra, G, and B K. Das. "A Cross-sectional Study of the Clinical Profile and Aetiological Spectrum of Pancytopenia in a Tertiary Care Centre." Singapore Medical Journal, vol. 51, no. 10, 2010, pp. 806-12.
Santra G, Das BK. A cross-sectional study of the clinical profile and aetiological spectrum of pancytopenia in a tertiary care centre. Singapore Med J. 2010;51(10):806-12.
Santra, G., & Das, B. K. (2010). A cross-sectional study of the clinical profile and aetiological spectrum of pancytopenia in a tertiary care centre. Singapore Medical Journal, 51(10), 806-12.
Santra G, Das BK. A Cross-sectional Study of the Clinical Profile and Aetiological Spectrum of Pancytopenia in a Tertiary Care Centre. Singapore Med J. 2010;51(10):806-12. PubMed PMID: 21103817.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - A cross-sectional study of the clinical profile and aetiological spectrum of pancytopenia in a tertiary care centre. AU - Santra,G, AU - Das,B K, PY - 2010/11/25/entrez PY - 2010/11/26/pubmed PY - 2011/4/7/medline SP - 806 EP - 12 JF - Singapore medical journal JO - Singapore Med J VL - 51 IS - 10 N2 - INTRODUCTION: Pancytopenia is a common haematological problem. It is suspected when a patient presents with anaemia, prolonged fever and a bleeding tendency. Pancytopenia has multiple causes, but the frequency of these causes has been reported in a limited number of studies. The present study was conducted to assess the aetiological pattern, clinical profile and bone marrow morphology of pancytopenia patients. METHODS: A total of 111 adult pancytopenia patients aged 13 to 65 years were studied during a one-year period to determine their clinical features, peripheral blood pictures and bone marrow morphologies. The aetiological pattern was assessed through the relevant investigations in the respective patients. RESULTS: 45.95 percent of the pancytopenic patients had a hypocellular marrow, while 54.05 percent had normocellular or hypercellular marrow. Idiopathic aplastic anaemia (20.72 percent) was the commonest cause of pancytopenia, followed by hypersplenism due to chronic liver disease (11.71 percent). Other important causes were kala-azar (nine percent), megaloblastic anaemia, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), infections and drug inducement. Infections such as kala-azar, falciparum malaria and enteric fever, megaloblastic anaemia as well as SLE were found to be treatable and reversible causes of pancytopenia. CONCLUSION: As a large number of pancytopenic patients have a reversible aetiology, early and proper diagnosis may be life-saving. SN - 0037-5675 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/21103817/A_cross_sectional_study_of_the_clinical_profile_and_aetiological_spectrum_of_pancytopenia_in_a_tertiary_care_centre_ L2 - http://smj.sma.org.sg/5110/5110a7.pdf DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -