Sonographic Correlation between objective spleen parenchymal echotexture and Hematological parameters in children with sickle cell disease

Authors

  • Muhammad Jamma Department of Radiography and Radiation Sciences, faculty of allied health sciences, federal university of health sciences, azare Author
  • Dauda Mohammed Federal University of Health sciences Teaching Hospital, Azare Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61171/pioneerjbiostat.4.1.2026.120

Keywords:

spleen; sickle cell disease; ultrasound; echotexture; pixel intensity; hematological parameters

Abstract

Background: Children with sickle cell disease (SCD) are frequently evaluated for spleen involvement using laboratory markers and subjective ultrasound interpretation. Quantitative ultrasound echotexture analysis could offer an objective way to assess spleen parenchymal alterations. Although its relationship with hematological markers of spleen function is not well established.

Aim: The study assessed the relationship between selected hematological parameters and quantitative ultrasonography spleen parenchymal echotexture in children with sickle cell disease.

Methods: In this cross-sectional study, children with SCD underwent standardized B-mode ultrasound scan of the spleen. Quantitative echotexture measures, including mean pixel intensity (MPI), were extracted from defined regions of interest using a validated MATLAB algorithm. Hematological parameters; white blood cell (WBC) count, red blood cell (RBC) count, and platelet count were obtained on the same day. Pearson correlation coefficients were used for analysis.

Results: Mean Pixel Intensity showed a statistically significant moderate positive correlation with WBC count (r = 0.53, p = 0.002). Correlations between MPI and RBC count (r = 0.09, p = 0.58), platelet count (r = 0.18, p = 0.27) were weak and not statistically significant.

Conclusion: Quantitative spleen echotexture, assessed via pixel intensity analysis, is meaningfully associated with WBC count in children with SCD. Mean pixel intensity may serve as a promising non-invasive imaging biomarker, complementing hematological assessment and enhancing the objectivity of spleen ultrasound evaluation.

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Author Biography

  • Dauda Mohammed, Federal University of Health sciences Teaching Hospital, Azare

    Department of Radiology, Consultant Radiologist

Published

2026-04-07

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

1.
Jamma M, Mohammed D. Sonographic Correlation between objective spleen parenchymal echotexture and Hematological parameters in children with sickle cell disease. Pioneer J Biostat Med Res [Internet]. 2026 Apr. 7 [cited 2026 Apr. 7];4(1). Available from: https://www.pjbmr.com/index.php/pjbmr/article/view/120

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