Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016719 (Friedreich's ataxia)
2,098 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Friedreich ataxia is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder affecting the peripheral and central nervous systems. One in 50,000 of the population are affected by this recessively inherited disorder, with onset usually before puberty. The recent localization of the disease locus to chromosome 9 has made it possible to provide genetic counselling to families with at least one affected child. Tight linkage of the disease mutation to an anonymous DNA marker MCT112 (D9S15) has been shown with a pairwise lod score of 36.1 at 0 = 0. We report here the first prenatal diagnosis in Friedreich ataxia. Using MCT112 and the confidence interval approach, we have calculated risks for a fully informative family with one affected sib.
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PMID:Prenatal diagnosis of Friedreich ataxia. 257 35

"Acadian ataxia" is a form of Friedreich ataxia found in individuals of Acadian ancestry. It was described by Barbeau (in Sobue I (ed): Spinocerebellar Degeneration; Tokyo: Univ. Tokyo Press, pp 121-142, 1980) as having a slower course of degeneration and less severe secondary symptoms than "classical" Friedreich ataxia. He suggested that these 2 forms of the disease may be distinct. The mutation causing "classical" Friedreich ataxia has recently been mapped to chromosome 9 through genetic linkage studies, and here we show that the locus causing Friedreich ataxia in Acadian families from southwestern Louisiana is tightly linked to the same DNA marker, D9S15. Thus, these 2 disorders, which may be differentiated clinically, are most probably due to mutation(s) at the same locus on chromosome 9.
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PMID:"Acadian" and "classical" forms of Friedreich ataxia are most probably caused by mutations at the same locus. 276 36

Friedreich's ataxia is an autosomal recessive disease with progressive degeneration of the central and peripheral nervous system. The biochemical abnormality underlying the disorder has not been identified. Prompted by the success in localizing the mutations causing Duchenne muscular dystrophy, Huntington's disease and cystic fibrosis, we have undertaken molecular genetic linkage studies to determine the chromosomal site of the Friedreich's ataxia mutation as an initial step towards the isolation and characterization of the defective gene. We report the assignment of the gene mutation for this disorder to chromosome 9p22-CEN by genetic linkage to an anonymous DNA marker MCT112 and the interferon-beta gene probe. In contrast to the clinical variation seen for the disorder, no evidence of genetic heterogeneity is observed.
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PMID:Mapping of mutation causing Friedreich's ataxia to human chromosome 9. 289 44