Hello Thalpals,
My wife has Beta Thalassemia Minor and has, throughout her life, always been symptomatic despite the insistence of doctors to the contrary. Usually this meant brief spells of aneamia with shortness of breath & fatigue leading to a day of rest. Afterwards, she would be back to normal. This changed last month. She had two sudden episodes of shortness of breath in the middle of the night, accompanied by chest pain and pain in her arms. Being only 35 and otherwise healthy we deemed the possibility of cardiac problems unlikely --- but nonetheless went to the local ER. They performed an ECG and blood oxygen level test and concluded she was not presenting with cardiac symptoms; referred us to our GP. GP ordered chests x-ray to check the lungs and full haematology & iron studies. These take days to receive full results. Meanwhile, my wife is too weak to move about, too weak to pick up minor household items; sleeps for days, eventually weeks. Pain in the chest travels to arms and back. I pushed the GP for a referral to a cardiologist who performed the full battery of stress electro cardio, echo cardio plus lung tomography scan using argon gas and injected contrast medium. These too are normal. Haematology comes back with the usual suspects noting microcytic hypochromic anaemia: slightly low Hb (112 g/L out of a nominal 115-165), MCV of 63 out of a nominal (79-99), MCH of 20 (nominal 27-34) & MCHC of 315 of a nominal (320-360). While low, none of these are in the extreme. Indeed these values are far better than they used to be. Yet the symptoms of anaemia would indeed appear extreme, all other obvious mechanical complications ruled out. My wife has not been receiving iron supplements or transfusions. Iron studies are normal too - only transferrin being on the low bound: 24 umol/L out of 32-48.
My question is: has anyone else experienced similarly severe episodes of anaemia while officially being diagnosed only as BTT ? If so, what was the conclusion, if any? I am tempted to not pin this on BTT exclusively but possibly an interaction with something otherwise undiagnosed.
Best Regards
Geronimox
P.S. We live in Australia but recently travelled to Tibet and therefore higher altitudes. I don't know if this is relevant.