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Query: UMLS:C0002895 (
sickle cell disease
)
11,747
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The weights of the spleens of series of patients with various disorders of children dating from birth or early infancy and causing splenomegaly, with or without cirrhosis of the liver, were analyzed. The linear regression equation for spleen weight versus age in months for each disease was derived, and the rate constants from these equations were adjusted for the age range of the patients in each group. The original data of Coppoletta and Wolbach were used for normal values. The rates of splenic growth of appropriate entities for which the regression equation could be computed fell into three groups, with adjusted rate constants (growth of spleen in grams per month) of 6.53-6.95 (biliary atresia, thalassemia, and cirrhosis following neonatal hepatitis), 2.30-2.62 (cirrhosis of alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency, infantile polycystic disease, and spherocytosis), and 1.06-1.11 (
cystic fibrosis
and idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura). These classes of splenic growth rates are approximately 10, 3.7, and 1.6 times the normal growth rate (0.67 g/mo). Rate constants could not be computed for the categories cirrhosis following viral hepatitis and hemolytic anemia other than spherocytosis and
sickle cell anemia
, and the numbers of patients with splenic vein obstruction, cirrhosis with the cholestatic syndrome of parenteral alimentation, hypoplastic anemia with hemosiderosis, tyrosinemia, Byler's disease, congenital hepatic fibrosis, and Wilson's disease were too few for analysis. The significance of the finding of classes or "quantum groups" of splenic growth rates in disorders of children, dating from birth or early infancy and causing splenomegaly, is uncertain. Comparable data on adequate series of patients with other appropriate disorders will be necessary.
...
PMID:Splenic growth rates in cirrhotic and other splenomegalic diseases of childhood. 384 62
An immunocompetent 12-year-old boy developed multiple microaerophilic streptococcal lung abscesses after application of orthodontic bands ("braces"). The dental work was done in the supine position. The data suggest that the patient aspirated the organisms and, possibly, flecks of dental cement, during orthodontic treatment. "Rubber dams" should be used to help prevent aspiration in children who receive dental work in the supine position. When a rubber dam cannot be used, as with orthodontic treatment, physicians should advise patients who are at risk for developing pulmonary infection (eg, patients with neuromuscular diseases which compromise cough and/or gag,
cystic fibrosis
,
sickle cell anemia
, primary immunodeficiency, etc) to have this dental work, including orthodontic treatment, performed in the erect position.
...
PMID:Multiple microaerophilic streptococcal lung abscesses after orthodontic treatment. 713 23
Patients with
cystic fibrosis
(CF) suffer from severe chronic pulmonary infections but rarely develop bacteremia/septicemia suggestive of an intact splenic mononuclear phagocyte function. The splenic function of 25 patients diagnosed with CF, aged 2 to 37 years, was evaluated using erythrocyte pit count by direct interference contrast microscopy. Results were compared with patients with
sickle cell disease
and normal individuals. All CF patients displayed normal splenic function by pit count. The mean percentage of pitted erythrocytes was 0.20 +/- 0.28 (range: 0.0% to 1.0%) versus 0.19 +/- 0.33 (range: 0.0% to 1.4%) in normal eusplenic controls. There were no episodes of bacteremia or septicemia despite recurrent acute exacerbations of chronic bacterial bronchitis and the use of central lines. We conclude that splenic function in CF is unabridged and may account for the rarity of bacteremia/septicemia in patients with CF despite the high prevalence of chronic bronchial infection in this population.
...
PMID:Intact splenic function in cystic fibrosis. 804 Sep 2
Reviewed 60 studies of depressive symptoms among children and adolescents with chronic medical problems. Findings indicate that children with a chronic medical problem are at slightly elevated risk for depressive symptoms but that most are not clinically depressed. Although great variability in depressive symptoms was found across children with the same disorder, children with certain disorders (e.g., asthma, recurrent abdominal pain,
sickle cell anemia
) may be at greater risk than children with other disorders (e.g., cancer,
cystic fibrosis
, diabetes mellitus). Disorder severity was inconsistently related to depressive symptoms, while time since diagnosis, gender, and age were generally unrelated to symptoms. Parent (vs. child) ratings and the use of community (vs. normative) control groups were associated with higher ratings of depressive symptoms among children with a chronic medical problem.
...
PMID:Depression among children with chronic medical problems: a meta-analysis. 805
Found moderate stability in the classification of maternal adjustment in two longitudinal studies of mothers of children and adolescents with
cystic fibrosis
and
sickle cell disease
. In terms of the transactional stress and coping model, stable poor maternal adjustment was associated with higher levels of appraisal of daily stress and palliative coping and low levels of family supportiveness. With initial levels of maternal adjustment, demographic parameters, and follow-up interval controlled, concurrent levels of daily stress accounted for significant portions of variance in maternal adjustment at follow-up for both illness groups. In addition, illness severity, child psychological adjustment, and family conflict added significant increments to maternal adjustment at follow-up in the
cystic fibrosis
group. Findings are discussed in terms of a basis for subsequent intervention studies to enhance the adjustment of mothers of children with chronic illness.
...
PMID:Stability and change in the psychological adjustment of mothers of children and adolescents with cystic fibrosis and sickle cell disease. 805 1
Cross-cultural differences exist in prenatal diagnosis and abortion for fetal anomaly, stemming from variations in laws, reimbursement policies, litigation, physicians' decision-making authority, and attitudes toward the prevention of handicaps. The first part of this paper discusses such differences in France and the U.S. The second part describes a survey of practising obstetricians in Paris, designed to assess (1) their attitudes toward pregnancy termination for various conditions, (2) their concern about fetal viability, (3) their desire for diagnostic certainty before justifying a late abortion, and (4) their perceived role in such decision-making. Among the 64.8 per cent (N = 217) who responded, the majority supported third-trimester termination (TTT) for diseases such as spina bifida, trisomy 21, microcephaly, and Duchenne muscular dystrophy; 30-59 per cent supported TTT for
cystic fibrosis
and
sickle cell disease
; and 22-29 per cent supported TTT for haemophilia, tetralogy of Fallot, limb amputation, and Turner and Klinefelter syndromes. Obstetricians who approved of abortion across trimesters were less concerned with the certainty of diagnosis than its severity, more likely to think that abortion ought to be the parents' choice, but more likely to report making a recommendation to the parents about whether to abort a fetus. Such permissive abortion attitudes might imply more permissive prenatal diagnosis and abortion practice among Parisian obstetricians, which might lead to increased migration of patients from other E.C. countries. Cross-cultural variation in obstetric practice suggests that an international registry of pregnancies terminated for medical reasons, enabling further study of this issue, would be valuable.
...
PMID:Attitudes toward abortion for fetal anomaly in the second vs. the third trimester: a survey of Parisian obstetricians. 828 89
New reproductive genetics means recently developed techniques to prevent the birth of children with specific defects or genetic diseases by testing individuals for
sickle cell anemia
, the thalassemias, Tay-Sachs disease,
cystic fibrosis
, or Down syndrome. Third World health services have many deficiencies with high maternal mortality rates (30-40 fold higher than in developed countries), the low percentage of births delivered by health personnel, the high rates of low birth weight babies, and high child malnutrition and infant mortality rates. The main issues in women's reproductive health are fertility regulation, abortion, maternal mortality, sexually transmitted diseases, and infertility. As a result of expansion in contraceptive use worldwide, the total fertility rate in developing countries has declined from 6.1 in 1965 to 3.9 in 1990. It is estimated that, worldwide, 36-53 million induced abortions are performed each year, most of them in developing nations. WHO estimates that more than 500,000 women die each year because of complications of pregnancy, most in developing countries. More than 95% of the 13 million estimated deaths of children under 5 years of age have occurred in these countries. Approximately 200 million people carry a potentially pathologic hemoglobinopathy gene, and about 250,000 children are born every year with hemoglobinopathy, most of them in the developing world. Reproductive genetic testing in big cities and in private for-profit ventures cater to the socioeconomic elite. Amniocentesis is often misused for fetal sex determination to abort female fetuses in India. Currently, in Cuba virtually every pregnant woman is tested for sickle cell trait and maternal serum alpha-fetoprotein levels between 15 and 20 weeks of gestation. It is predicted that the judicious use of reproductive genetic testing will be possible when health and quality of life issues are addressed properly.
...
PMID:Reproductive health and genetic testing in the Third World. 840
Since the early descriptions of
sickle cell anemia
, it has been clear that genotype at a single locus rarely completely predicts phenotype. This paper reviews explanations for phenotypic variability in some monogenic diseases. In
cystic fibrosis
, there is strong correlation between genotype and pancreatic phenotype but only weak association with respiratory phenotype, possibly due to differential inheritance of alleles at loci controlling susceptibility to respiratory infection. In addition, disease mutations have been shown to have more or less severe effect, depending on other variation within the
cystic fibrosis
gene. In phenylketonuria, genotype at the phenylalanine hydroxylase locus appears to explain the biochemical phenotype, but not the intellectual status. There may be genetically determined variation in flux through the minor metabolic pathways for phenylalanine, influencing levels of alternative metabolites involved in mental development. Phenotypic discordance in
sickle cell anemia
and beta-thalassemia has been associated with the co-inheritance of genes for hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin. A mouse locus has been identified that influences tumour number in mice with the multiple intestinal neoplasia gene. Understanding of the genetic interactions that determine phenotype in apparently monogenic diseases should lead to clarification of the role of different genes in polygenic diseases with complex inheritance patterns, as well as enhancing the ability to predict the outcome of a disease mutation.
...
PMID:Relationship between genotype and phenotype in monogenic diseases: relevance to polygenic diseases. 872 77
Preimplantation polar body diagnosis makes it possible to detect and avoid genetic and chromosomal disorders before pregnancy. We have shown that the polar body biopsy does not affect fertilization and viability of the resulting embryos. Our present experience of polar body diagnosis includes 187 clinical cycles, performed for preimplantation diagnosis of
cystic fibrosis
, alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency, Tay-Sach's disease, retinitis pigmentosa, hemophilia A, Alport and
sickle cell disease
, and common aneuploidy, using the FISH technique. Over three-quarters of these cycles have resulted in embryo transfer, 38 in clinical pregnancy and 12 in the birth of an unaffected child. The present review describes the results of our clinical trial on the polar body diagnosis of genetic and chromosomal disorders, demonstrating the reliability of polar body genetic analysis for preimplantation diagnosis.
...
PMID:Preimplantation polar body diagnosis. 880 40
Mycoplasma pneumoniae, a gram-negative bacteria, is an important cause of lower respiratory tract infection in children (20% of cases). The infection tends to be endemic and is punctuated by epidemic episodes every 4 to 7 years. Its frequency seems to be higher in children between 5 and 9 years of age, but is probably underestimated before 5 years. M.pneumoniae may cause multisystem infection. Diagnosis is established upon clinical data and laboratory findings. Usually, the infection is associated with leucocyte count under 15,000/mL and C-reactive protein under 50 m/L. Detection of M. pneumoniae DNA in clinical samples appears to have advantages over serological tests. Severe infections have been described in patients with humoral and cellular immunodeficiencies,
sickle cell disease
,
cystic fibrosis
. Treatment with macrolids and tetracyclines (after 8 years of age) is indicated. Respiratory functional sequelae are possible.
...
PMID:[Bronchopulmonary infections caused by Mycoplasma pneumoniae in children]. 897 63
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