To determine if you have sickle cell trait or sickle cell disease
To determine if you have sickle cell trait or sickle cell disease
Routinely as part of newborn screening; if you are in a high risk group and were born before newborn screening was mandated and want to know if you have sickle cell disease or are carrying the sickle cell trait; when you have signs and symptoms of anemia or abnormal results from a complete blood count (CBC) and your health care practitioner suspects sickle cell disease or trait
A blood sample drawn from a vein in your arm or, for infants, by pricking a heel or finger
None; however, if this test is used for diagnosis, the sample should not be drawn after a recent blood transfusion.
Sickle cell anemia is an inherited disorder that leads to the production of an abnormal type of hemoglobin called hemoglobin S (Hb S or Hgb S). Sickle cell tests determine the presence and relative amount of hemoglobin S in a blood sample or detect mutations in the genes that produce hemoglobin to help diagnose sickle cell anemia and/or identify people with sickle cell trait.
Hemoglobin is the protein in red blood cells (RBCs) that binds to oxygen in the lungs and carries it to tissues throughout the body. Typically, hemoglobin A (Hb A, adult hemoglobin) makes up most of the hemoglobin found in normal RBCs in adults, with small amounts of hemoglobin A2 and hemoglobin F. Before babies are born, they normally produce large amounts of hemoglobin F (Hb F, fetal hemoglobin), which is then replaced by Hb A as the predominant hemoglobin shortly after birth.
Sickle cell disease is an inherited condition, passed from parents to children. Inheriting mutations in the genes that code for the production of hemoglobin can lead to abnormal types of hemoglobin (variants), such as Hb S and hemoglobin C (Hb C). Hemoglobin Cis one of the more common hemoglobin variants and may cause no symptoms or mild illness.
Hb S can form crystals that change the shape of the RBC from a round disc to a characteristic sickle shape. This altered shape limits the RBC’s ability to flow smoothly throughout the blood vessels in the body, limits the hemoglobin’s ability to transport oxygen to tissues, and decreases RBC lifespan from 120 days to about 10-20 days. A person with sickle cell disease (homozygous for Hb S) can become severely anemic because the body cannot produce RBCs as fast as they are destroyed. The affected person can suffer painful episodes and a variety of complications when sickled cells become lodged in and obstruct small blood vessels.
This form enables patients to ask specific questions about lab tests. Your questions will be answered by a laboratory scientist as part of a voluntary service provided by one of our partners, American Society for Clinical Laboratory Science. Please allow 2-3 business days for an email response from one of the volunteers on the Consumer Information Response Team.
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