Serum erythropoietin concentration in anaemia of visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar) before and during antimonial therapy |
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Authors: | Amal M. Saeed,Eltahir A. G. Khalil,Afaf M. A. Elhassan,Faisal A. Hashim,Ahmed M. Elhassan,Joachim Fandrey,& Wolfgang Jelkmann |
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Affiliation: | Department of Physiology,;Department of Pathology, University of Khartoum, Sudan,;Institute of Physiology, Medical University of Luebeck, Germany |
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Abstract: | Serum erythropoietin (Epo) concentrations and variables of red cell and iron status were studied in 27 Sudanese patients who were treated with sodium stibogluconate for visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar). Blood haemoglobin increased from 6.4 (±1.7 SD) to 9.5 (±1.4) g/dl during treatment. Serum ferritin decreased concomitantly. Serum iron levels were unchanged whereas the total iron binding capacity increased slightly. The pre-treatment serum Epo concentration in relation to the blood haemoglobin concentration was not as high as expected from the one in primary haematological diseases, indicating that there is a relative lack of Epo in anaemic kala-azar patients. Serum Epo further decreased during stibogluconate therapy. The normal dependence of the serum Epo level on the blood haemoglobin concentration was lost during mid-term antimonial treatment, but it recovered thereafter. Cell culture studies with the human hepatoma cells HepG2 showed that stibogluconate ( 30 μg/ml) inhibited Epo gene expression. Thus, effective treatment of kala-azar with stibogluconate results in improvement of anaemia, although the drug itself may impair Epo production. |
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Keywords: | leishmaniasis kala-azar anaemia inflammation erythropoietin |
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