How Can I Find Out if I Have Thalassemia?
There is a simple and accurate test for thalassemia. It requires a sample of blood taken from a vein. However, this test is not done routinely and must be requested. The test measures hemoglobin A2.
Why is it Important to Know if I Have Thalassemia?
If you have thalassemia trait, you may have a mild anemia. This anemia might be mistaken for other kinds of anemia, especially iron deficiency anemia. Some people with thalassemia trait take iron medication because they believe their anemia is due to iron deficiency. Iron medication is not necessary and may even be harmful unless it has been established by specific tests that you are deficient in iron.
MOST IMPORTANT, if you and your partner have thalassemia trait, you are at risk for having children with thalassemia major, a serious disease without satisfactory treatment. At the present time, the principal treatment for children with thalassemia major is regular blood transfusions.
What Can I Do if I Have Thalassemia Trait?
If you have thalassemia trait, you need not be concerned for your own health. However, you may be at risk for having a child with thalassemia major.
If your partner is tested and proves to have the normal type of hemoglobin, then no child born to the two of you can have thalassemia major.
If your partner does have thalassemia trait, you are at risk of having a child with thalassemia major. Your physician can discuss the options available to you.
Even if you have had children who do not have thalassemia major, you might still consider a test for your partner. If both parents have thalassemia trait, the risk of a thalassemia major is the same for each pregnancy no matter how many children with normal hemoglobin or with thalassemia trait you have already had.
Wouldn't it reassure you to know that you are free of the risk of having a child with thalassemia major?
|