Disease | acute chest syndrome |
Phenotype | C0002871|anemia |
Sentences | 3 |
PubMedID- 26199788 | Risk factors for the development of pulmonary fat embolism include traumatic etiologies such as fractures to the ribs or long bones, recent orthopedic surgery as well as nontraumatic etiologies such as parenteral lipid infusion, immunosuppression from recent corticosteroid exposure or diabetes mellitus, burns, liposuction, cardiopulmonary bypass, and sickle cell anemia with acute chest syndrome. |
PubMedID- 23885266 | They include painful bone crisis, severe anemia, laboratory diagnosis of bacteremia, acute chest syndrome, aplastic anemia, splenic sequestration, systemic inflammatory response syndrome (sirs) and behaviors such as anxiety and hallucination. |
PubMedID- 25619382 | Increased risk of severe vaso-occlusive episodes after initial acute chest syndrome in children with sickle cell anemia less than 4 years old: sleep and asthma cohort. |
Page: 1