Third Department of Pediatrics, University of Athens, Attikon Hospital, Athens, Greece.
The authors describe the paradoxical clinical phenotype of an undetected severe hemolysis in parallel with the development of severe jaundice in a 13-year-old male suffering from a confirmed interaction of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency (Mediterranean variant, 563 C/T) and Gilbert syndrome [variant (TA)7/(TA)7]. The child had 2 acute hemolytic episodes at the age of 10 and 13 years following infections of unknown origin. Both episodes were characterized by considerably high bilirubin levels (1st episode: 10.8 mg/dL, 2nd episode: 17.8 mg/dL) associated with unexpectably mild hemolysis indices (1st episode hemoglobin levels, 11.1 g/dL; reticulocyte counts, 2.5%; 2nd episode hemoglobin values, 12.7 g/dL; reticulocyte counts, 2.5%). During the steady-state condition of the child, hemoglobin values were within the normal ranges for his age (14.2 g/dL) and bilirubin levels were slightly elevated (1.70 mg/dL, indirect 1.5 mg/dL). The interaction of the two genetic abnormalities in the causation of this odd clinical phenotype is discussed.