Beta-thalassemia Screening

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Beta-thalassemia Screening
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Beta-thalassemia Screening, in Visit Clinic

Detects inherited beta-globin problems that cause anemia, guiding diagnosis, treatment, and family planning decisions for families in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Blood
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
6
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a Beta-thalassemia Screening Test in Visit Clinic?

Beta-thalassemia screening looks for reduced or abnormal production of the beta part of hemoglobin. Hemoglobin is the protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen. When beta chains are faulty, red blood cells can be small, pale, or low in number. This screening helps detect carriers (traits) and affected people with varying severity. Doctors use it for diagnostic evaluation of anemia, for prenatal and preconception counseling, and for planning care like transfusions or monitoring. Tests often include blood counts, hemoglobin subtypes, and sometimes DNA testing. Finding a carrier can prompt family testing and genetic counseling to assess risks for children.

Beta-thalassemia Screening Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Beta-thalassemia Screening Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Beta-thalassemia Screening test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • CBC with RBC indices
  • peripheral blood smear
  • hemoglobin electrophoresis or HPLC (HbA2
  • HbF)
  • iron studies
  • DNA mutation analysis

Why Take a Beta-thalassemia Screening Test in Visit Clinic?

Beta-thalassemia Screening is used in hemoglobinopathy or prenatal screening panels and when unexplained microcytic anemia is present. Doctors may order it for symptoms like persistent fatigue, pallor, slow growth in children, or when routine blood counts show low MCV. It diagnoses beta-thalassemia trait, intermedia, or major and helps guide treatment and counseling. Abnormal results come from inherited beta-globin gene changes; iron deficiency or recent transfusion can also affect results. A family history of thalassemia makes this test particularly important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is a beta thalassemia screening test in Visit Clinic?plus

Beta thalassemia screening tests identify carriers or affected individuals by evaluating blood for abnormal hemoglobin and genetic mutations. Initial tests include complete blood count and red cell indices; low MCV and microcytosis suggest screening. Confirmatory tests are hemoglobin electrophoresis or HPLC to measure HbA2/HbF and molecular DNA testing for specific gene mutations. Screening is recommended for those with family history or before pregnancy.

Which is the best diagnostic test for thalassemia in Visit Clinic?plus

Hemoglobin electrophoresis or high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) is the best diagnostic test for thalassemia, as it identifies abnormal hemoglobin patterns. Complete blood count with red-cell indices and peripheral smear are useful screening tests. Molecular genetic testing provides a definitive diagnosis—essential for alpha-thalassemia, prenatal testing, and precise mutation identification when electrophoresis is inconclusive.

When is thalassemia screening done in Visit Clinic?plus

Thalassemia screening is offered preconception or at the first antenatal (booking) visit to identify carrier couples. It’s also recommended for people with unexplained microcytic anemia, those with a family history, and newborns in high-prevalence areas. If both parents are carriers, diagnostic fetal testing (CVS or amniocentesis) may be offered.

At which age is thalassemia detected in Visit Clinic?plus

Thalassemia can be detected prenatally through genetic tests (chorionic villus sampling or amniocentesis), at birth by newborn screening, in infancy—often by 6–12 months when severe beta‑thalassemia causes anemia—or later when milder forms or carrier status are found by routine blood or genetic testing. Carrier screening is commonly offered before or during pregnancy.

Why is thalassemia screening important in Visit Clinic?plus

Thalassemia screening identifies carriers and affected individuals early, enabling genetic counseling and informed reproductive choices to reduce births of severe disease. Early diagnosis allows timely monitoring, vaccination, iron chelation or transfusion management, preventing complications like severe anemia, organ damage, and infections. Population screening helps public-health planning, reduces treatment burden, and improves outcomes and quality of life for patients and families.

What is the normal range of thalassemia in Visit Clinic?plus

Thalassemia screening uses haemoglobin and red‑cell indices: HbA2 2.0–3.5% is normal (HbA2 >3.5% suggests β‑thalassaemia trait); mean corpuscular volume (MCV) normal 80–100 fL (MCV <80 fL suggests microcytosis/trait). Normal haemoglobin: men ~13.5–17.5 g/dL, women ~12.0–15.5 g/dL. RBC count may be normal or raised; DNA testing may be needed for confirmation.