Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0019045 (
hemoglobinopathies
)
2,704
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The efficacy of correlating the L/S ratio in the amniotic fluid with fetal lung maturity has been substantiated in normal pregnancies. In gestations complicated by fetomaternal diseases, however, the assay is less reliable. This study involves 555 pregnancies in which there was a significant maternal, fetal, or placental disorder. The L/S ratio was related to fetal respiratory maturity as measured by Dubowitz criteria and the occurrence of RDS. The results show that pre-eclampsia, chronic hypertension, diabetes (Class D, E, F), significant cardiovascular disease, severe
hemoglobinopathies
, various congenital anomalies, chronic placental insufficiency, and prolonged ruptured membranes accelerated the L/S ration. Conversely, mild diabetes (Class B, C), intrinsic renal disease, hepatitis, collagen disease, hydrops fetalis, syphilis, and
toxoplasmosis
were associated with a delay in the L/S ratio. A significant increase in erroneous responses was noted in these patients when the L/S ratio was correlated to infant maturity and to the incidence of RDS. Possible mechanisms for these findings are discussed.
...
PMID:The lecithin/sphingomyelin ratio in cases associated with fetomaternal disease. 57 73
Utilizing an easy and safe procedure for fetal blood sampling in utero we have studied 409 fetuses for prenatal diagnosis of rubella,
toxoplasmosis
, hemophilia, and
hemoglobinopathies
. Retrospectively we selected 163 fetuses confirmed as normal at birth and tested between 18 and 30 wk of gestation to establish normal hematological parameters and to follow the evolution of erythropoiesis, differential counts, hemoglobin synthesis, and hemostasis. Total white blood cell and platelet counts did not change during this period. The lymphocytes represented the main population and we observed a decrease of normoblasts during gestation. The results show a progressive increase of red blood cells and hemoglobin. This evolution is demonstrated by the ratio hemoglobin A to acetylated hemoglobin F. No significant modification of hemostasis was observed over a 12-wk intrauterine gestation. These results provide useful reference values for future investigations.
...
PMID:Hematological values of 163 normal fetuses between 18 and 30 weeks of gestation. 370 24
There is an increased attention to preconception care and counseling (PCC) in the US. Midwives should include it into their practice. Even though the PCC concept is new, many midwives already know and/or practice its components, including risk assessment, health promotion, psychological and medical interventions, and follow-up. Opportunities for PCC are gynecology visits, postpartum visits, school-based programs, occupational health centers, and local health departments. Midwives can help women decide whether they are psychologically prepared for motherhood through group discussions and family-timing scenarios. They should refer women to substance abuse counseling and address physical abuse. A medical history and physical exam followed by an evaluation of any medical problems are also important. Preconception screening should include laboratory tests for hemoglobin or hematocrit, Rh factor, rubella titer, urine dipstick (protein and sugar), Pap smear, gonococcal culture, syphilis ...... and hepatitis B test. Midwives should offer women an illicit drug screen and an HIV serodiagnostic test. Additional tests recommended for some women include a tuberculosis screen, chlamydia culture or rapid screen,
toxoplasmosis
, herpes simplex, cytomegalovirus, varicella,
hemoglobinopathies
, Tay-Sachs, and karyotype. Factors which may affect sperm morphology are cigarette smoking, alcohol drinking, vitamins A and E, linoleic acid, and zinc. Other male factors which may affect pregnancy outcome are advanced age, sexually transmitted diseases, HIV, and exposure to drugs and chemicals. Midwives should determine the need to refer women for genetic counseling. They can help establish a positive environment for conception by conducting a nutritional history and counseling; promoting vitamin supplementation; by counseling about dangers of cigarette smoking, alcohol drinking, and drugs; and by keeping up to date on reproductive toxicology, environmental pollutants, and occupational hazards. Midwives should take a menstrual, contraceptive, and sexual history. Menstrual charting can help detect ovulation. Other issues needing to be addressed are infertility and choosing a care provider and birth place.
...
PMID:Preconception care. An opportunity to maximize health in pregnancy. 841 Mar 47
We present the evolution, organization and results of the National Neonatal and High Risk Screening Program in Costa Rica (PNT). This program has been working uninterruptedly for more than fourteen years. Costa Rica currently has a literacy rate of 95%. To August 2004 the rate of infant mortality was 9.74 per 1000 births and to 2003, life expectancy was 76.3 years for men and 81.1 years for women. The control of infectious and parasitic diseases, as well as of severe malnutrition, has given room to a prevalence of chronic diseases with a pathology profile similar to that of a developed country. The clinical observation, mainly starting from early 70s, of a growing number of patients with mental retardation and other disabilities caused by congenital hypothyroidism and hereditary metabolic diseases that could have been prevented in many cases with an early diagnosis and opportune treatment, led us to the decision to implement a systematically massive neonatal screening for these diseases. The presence of a single Public System of Social Security in Costa Rica, which currently includes from primary health care up to the hospitals of tertiary attention, with a single Children's Hospital for the whole country, as well as communication facilities, are factors that offered, in principle, favorable conditions for this effort, even for a developing country. To September 2004, 835,217 children have been screened. There is a coverage of 95.1% of the newborns in the country. Also to this date, 259 children with congenital hypothyroidism, 18 with phenylketonuria, 20 with the maple syrup disease, 30 with congenital adrenal hyperplasia and 10 with galactosemia have been detected, confirmed and treated, for a total of 337 children that were spared of mental retardation, other disabilities and even death. Massive neonatal screening for organic acidemias recently started in June of 2004. Cystic fibrosis is under a pilot study and the screening for
hemoglobinopathies
and
toxoplasmosis
is planned. The Center for Prevention of Disabilities, which started its functions on September 23, 2002, made feasible to integrate neonatal screening, high risk screening and diagnostic confirmation of the diseases now included in the national screening program as well as those to be added in the future.
...
PMID:Evolution and innovations of the National Neonatal and High Risk Screening Program in Costa Rica. 1736 38
Prenatal diagnosis of infectious diseases has been shown to be indispensable to confirm or exclude in utero infections due to cytomegalovirus, rubella,
toxoplasmosis
, varicella, parvovirus and herpes simplex, and a multidisciplinary approach is needed. Our report is on data obtained from 236 pregnant women at risk for the above-mentioned conditions. The specific IgM test suggested seroconversion in only 198 of these patients and 162 of them requested prenatal diagnoses by means of fetal blood sampling or amniocentesis, or both. The results are encouraging but more work is required to optimize our diagnostic approach, i.e., monoclonal antibodies and DNA probes with direct identification by means of choronic villi sampling, which we use for prenatal diagnoses of
hemoglobinopathy
(DNA-genetic).
...
PMID:Prenatal diagnoses of cytomegalovirus (CMV), rubella, toxoplasmosis, varicella, parvovirus, herpes simplex and syphilis. the Lagos programme experience. 2042 Feb 79
Anemia in neonatal period is rare, with the common causes being Rh and ABO blood group incompatibility, hemorrhagic disease of newborn, congenital hemolytic anemia,
hemoglobinopathies
, and TORCH (
toxoplasmosis
, rubella, cytomegalovirus, herpes virus) infections. Congenital leukemia and infantile osteopetrosis (OP) are among the rare causes of neonatal anemia. A review of the literature shows approximately 200 reported cases of congenital leukemia. Articles describing the imaging features of congenital leukemia are still rarer. Infantile OP, another rare disorder with a reported incidence of 1 in 250,000 has characteristic imaging features, which are diagnostic of the disease. We report a case each, of two rare diseases: Congenital leukemia and infantile osteopetrosis. Additionally, our report highlights the radiological and imaging features of congenital leukemia and infantile OP and their crucial role in arriving at an early diagnosis.
...
PMID:Imaging diagnosis of neonatal anemia: report of two unusual etiologies. 2460 54