Symptoms depend on the type and severity of thalassemia.
Carriers of thalassemia genes may have no symptoms or very mild symptoms with occasional crisis; those with three or more (out of four) affected genes will have severe and life threatening symptoms. Full alpha thalassemia with all four genes failing to synthesise alpha-globin, is generally fatal to the unborn child. The absence of alpha globin means that zero functional hemoglobin is produced during gestation. Unmatched gamma globin chains cluster to form
hemoglobin Bart's, which is ineffective at transporting oxygen. In this situation, a fetus will develop
hydrops fetalis, a form of
edema, which can be detected on prenatal ultrasound. The child will normally die before or shortly after birth, unless intrauterine
blood transfusion is performed. Less severe alpha thalassemia may affect growth and development. If thalassemia is untreated or undetected in the infant, this can lead to developmental issues such as slowed growth, delayed puberty, bone abnormalities, and intellectual impairment. More generally, impaired production of hemoglobin causes
anemia, resulting in tiredness and a general lack of energy, shortness of breath, rapid or irregular heartbeat, dizziness, pale skin, yellowing of the skin and eyes (jaundice). In thalassemia, ineffective
erythropoiesis causes the bone marrow to expand. This expansion is a compensatory response to the damage caused to red blood cells by the imbalanced production of globin chains. Bone marrow expansion can lead to abnormal bone structure, particularly in the skull and face. Expansion of the bone marrow in the developing child leads to a distinctive facial shape often referred to as "Chipmunk
facies". Other skeletal changes include
osteoporosis, People with thalassemia can get
too much iron in their bodies, either from the disease itself as RBCs are destroyed, or as a consequence of frequent blood transfusions. Excess iron is not excreted, but forms toxic
non-transferrin-bound iron. This can lead to organ damage, potentially affecting the heart, liver, endocrine system, bones and spleen. Symptoms include an irregular heartbeat,
cardiomyopathy,
cirrhosis of the liver,
hypothyroidism, delayed
puberty and fertility problems, brittle and deformed bones, and an enlarged spleen. The
spleen is the organ which removes damaged red blood cells from circulation; in thalassemia patients it is abnormally active, causing it to
enlarge and possibly become hyperactive, a condition called
hypersplenism. The
immune system can become compromised in a number of ways; anemia, iron overload, and hypersplenism may affect the immune response and increase the risk of severe infection. ==Diagnosis==