A Profile of Sickle Cell Disease in Nigeria

Nigeria has a population of 112 million with an annual growth rate of 3.2%. About 25% of adults throughout the country have the sickle cell trait, AS, while the Hb C trait is largely confined to the Yoruba people of southwestern Nigeria in whom it occurs in about 6%. Other variant hemoglobins including beta thalassemia are rare, but alpha thalassemia occurs in 39% (32% with 3 alpha-globin genes; 7% with 2 alpha-globin genes). Of a total of 5.4 million expected live births in 1988, about 90,000 will have SCD and 1.1 million the trait, AS. The clinical phenotype of sickle cell anemia is severe with manifestations occurring very early in childhood and mean Hb level 7.6 g/dl with HbF 5.9%. A very high infant mortality due to infections occurs especially in rural areas. Gallstones, leg ulcerations, and stroke appear less common than in American sicklers, and aplastic crises have not been described. Poor availability of resources to the public health and welfare sectors and economic inflation are severely curtailing access to appropriate medical and social services. This situation is frustrating to the families of a growing number of surviving patients in urban or middle to upper income groups. Efforts to create more awareness of SCD are paradoxically increasing frustration and stigmatization in the absence of a commensurate improvement of services. Any measures aimed at enhancing the sensitization of health professionals, policy makers, and resource allocators to the pertinent issues in the control of SCD would seem to be at this stage an important step in the right direction.

[1]  M. Durosinmi,et al.  Prevalence of cholelithiasis in Nigerians with sickle cell disease. , 1989, African journal of medicine and medical sciences.

[2]  O. Akinyanju,et al.  Enuresis in sickle cell disease. I. Prevalence studies. , 1989, Journal of tropical pediatrics.

[3]  O. Akinyanju,et al.  The hemoglobinopathies and pregnancy in Lagos , 1988, International journal of gynaecology and obstetrics: the official organ of the International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics.

[4]  W. Kaine,et al.  Sickle cell hepatic crisis in Nigerian children. , 1988, Journal of tropical pediatrics.

[5]  O. Akinyanju,et al.  Antenatal iron supplementation in sickle cell disease , 1987, International journal of gynaecology and obstetrics: the official organ of the International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics.

[6]  O. Akinyanju,et al.  Acute illness in Nigerian children with sickle cell anaemia. , 1987, Annals of tropical paediatrics.

[7]  O. Akinyanju,et al.  Chronic tonsillitis, tonsillectomy and sickle cell crises , 1987, The Journal of Laryngology & Otology.

[8]  W. W. Ebong Septic arthritis in patients with sickle-cell disease. , 1987, British journal of rheumatology.

[9]  D. Higgs,et al.  Alpha‐thalassaemia in Nigeria: Its interaction with sickle‐cell disease , 1987, European journal of haematology.

[10]  A. Yakubu,et al.  Neurological disturbances in sickle cell disease in children in Zaria, Nigeria. , 1985, East African medical journal.

[11]  A. Fleming,et al.  Avascular necrosis of the femoral head in sickle-cell disease. A series from the Guinea Savannah of Nigeria. , 1985, The Journal of bone and joint surgery. British volume.

[12]  M. Brozovīc,et al.  Sickle cell disease in Britain. , 1984, Journal of clinical pathology.

[13]  D. Labie,et al.  Evidence for the multicentric origin of the sickle cell hemoglobin gene in Africa. , 1984, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[14]  Kaine Wn Sickle cell anaemia in children in Eastern Nigeria. A detailed analysis of 210 cases. , 1982 .

[15]  A. Fleming Sickle-cell disease. A handbook for the general clinician. , 1982 .

[16]  W. Kaine Sickle cell anaemia in children in Eastern Nigeria. A detailed analysis of 210 cases. , 1982, East African medical journal.

[17]  O. Akinyanju,et al.  FERTILITY IN MALES WITH SICKLE CELL DISEASE , 1981, The Lancet.

[18]  G. Serjeant,et al.  Behaviour of untreated proliferative sickle retinopathy. , 1980, The British journal of ophthalmology.

[19]  F. N. Ihekwaba Priapism in sickle cell anaemia. , 1980, Journal of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh.

[20]  A. Fleming,et al.  Abnormal haemoglobins in the Sudan savanna of Nigeria. III. Malaria, immunoglobulins and antimalarial antibodies in sickle cell disease. , 1979, Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology.

[21]  O. Akinyanju,et al.  Cholelithiasis and biliary tract disease in sickle-cell disease in Nigerians. , 1979, Postgraduate medical journal.

[22]  A. Fleming,et al.  Abnormal haemoglobins in the Sudan savanna of Nigeria. I. Prevalence of haemoglobins and relationships between sickle cell trait, malaria and survival. , 1979, Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology.

[23]  O. Akinyanju,et al.  Leg ulceration in sickle cell disease in Nigeria. , 1979, Tropical and geographical medicine.

[24]  F. Lesi Anthropometric status of sickle cell anaemia patients in Lagos, Nigeria. , 1979, Nigerian medical journal : journal of the Nigeria Medical Association.

[25]  Akinyanju Oo,et al.  Ocular findings in homozygous sickle cell disease in Nigeria. , 1978 .

[26]  W. W. Ebong Avascular necrosis of the femoral head associated with haemoglobinopathy. , 1977, Tropical and geographical medicine.

[27]  R. O. Murray Radiology of Sickle Cell Disease , 1974, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine.

[28]  G. Serjeant Leg ulceration in sickle cell anemia. , 1974, Archives of internal medicine.

[29]  G. Serjeant,et al.  Duodenal ulceration in sickle cell anaemia. , 1973, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[30]  L. Luzzatto,et al.  PREGNANCY IN HOMOZYGOUS SICKLE‐CELL ANAEMIA , 1972, The Journal of obstetrics and gynaecology of the British Commonwealth.

[31]  C. Ifeka,et al.  Peoples and Empires of West Africa , 1972 .

[32]  J. Clegg,et al.  Preliminary surveys for the prevalence of the thalassemia genes in some African populations. , 1971, Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology.

[33]  G. Esan,et al.  The Thalassaemia Syndromes in Nigeria , 1970, British journal of haematology.

[34]  A. Adeloye,et al.  The nervous system in sickle cell disease. , 1970, The African journal of medical sciences.

[35]  R. Scott,et al.  Studies in Sickle-Cell Anemia , 1969, Clinical pediatrics.

[36]  T. Krizek,et al.  SKIN ULCERATION IN SICKLE CELL ANEMIA , 1969, Plastic and reconstructive surgery.

[37]  A. H.,et al.  The peoples of Southern Nigeria , 1969 .

[38]  O. Akinkugbe Renal papillary necrosis in sickle-cell haemoglobinopathy. , 1967, British medical journal.

[39]  Richard L. Sklar,et al.  The Federal Republic of Nigeria , 1966 .

[40]  J. Lindenbaum,et al.  FOLIC ACID DEFICIENCY IN SICKLE-CELL ANEMIA. , 1963, The New England journal of medicine.

[41]  Watson Ej Folic acid deficiency in sickle-cell anaemia. , 1962 .

[42]  D. F. Roberts,et al.  Abnormal hemoglobins in Bornu , 1960 .

[43]  R. Hendrickse,et al.  Salmonella osteitis in Nigerian children. , 1960, Lancet.

[44]  H. Lehmann,et al.  The River Niger as a Barrier in the Spread Eastwards of Hæmoglobin C: a Survey of Hæmoglobins in the Ibo , 1959, Nature.

[45]  G. Edington,et al.  The Distribution of Haemoglobin C in West Africa. , 1956 .

[46]  H. Lehmann,et al.  Distribution of the S and C haemoglobin variants in two Nigerian communities. , 1956, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[47]  Mabayoje Jo Sickle-cell anaemia; a major disease in West Africa. , 1956 .

[48]  D. Jelliffe,et al.  Sickle-cell Trait in Western Nigeria , 1952 .

[49]  D. Jelliffe,et al.  The sickle-cell trait in western Nigeria; a survey of 1,881 cases in the Yoruba. , 1952, British medical journal.

[50]  REPORT on the malaria conference in Equatorial Africa, Kampala, Uganda, 27 November - 9 December 1950. , 1951, World Health Organization technical report series.