My son have thalassemia main and my daughter have chicken pox ??


what happens if my son get chicken pox and he has thalasemia foremost can this be seriouse i think it is to past due as my daughter has be around him help me ! i dont know what to do is this to seriouse for him

Answers:
thalassemia affects red blood cell not the white.
You have not stated if he have had any vaccines, and what age group, and if he is mildly anemic at this point or to some extent sick and needing treatment for it.
Ideally, you should be on the phone next to your doctor asking this question. Please build the call as soon as you can.
Yes, it can be awfully serious and life threatening.

Take him to see a doctor and hastily.
You need to isolate him. See your doctor and ask if he can benefit from inoculation
Go to your doctor now!!!!!!!!!...

Being a mover of the disease may confer a degree of protection against malaria, and is moderately common among individuals from Italian or Greek origin, and also within some African and Indian regions. This is probably by making the red blood cells more susceptible to the smaller number lethal species Plasmodium vivax, simultaneously making the host RBC environment unsuitable for the merozoites of the fatal strain Plasmodium falciparum. This is believed to be a selective survival advantage for patients beside the various thalassemia traits. In that respect it resembles another genetic disorder, sickle-cell disease.

Epidemiological evidence from Kenya suggests another judgment: protection against severe anemia may be the advantage.[8].

People diagnosed next to heterozygous (carrier) Beta-Thalassemia have some protection against coronary heart disease.[9]



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