Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019045 (hemoglobinopathies)
2,704 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sixty four cases of retinal and vitreous hemorrhages are reported during a 15 months prospective study in Bamako. Main diseases associated with hemorrhages are high blood pressure (56% of cases), hemoglobinopathies (33%) and diabetes mellitus (23%). In 28% of cases several aetiologies are connected. SC hemoglobin is a frequent aetiology of vitreous hemorrhage (40%). Hemoglobin AS and AC, generally asymptomatic, are also liable to hemorrhages. Terson and Eales syndromes, Werlhof disease, hemophilia and AIDS are most uncommon. In 8% of cases there is not any aetiology.
...
PMID:[General causes of retinal and vitreous hemorrhages in Mali]. 181 88

Prenatal diagnoses of the genetic disorders alpha, beta thalassemia, HbS, Hb Lepore, hemophilia and cystic fibrosis were sought in 88 cases. Six unsuccessful attempts at diagnosis resulted from DNA polymorphisms which were only 50% informative (four cases) and prenatal diagnoses which had been undertaken before it was known whether DNA polymorphisms in family studies were informative (two cases). The most frequent indications for prenatal diagnosis were the hemoglobinopathies although requests for exclusion of cystic fibrosis formed the majority during 1989. Strong linkage disequilibrium between the cystic fibrosis defect and its associated DNA polymorphisms facilitated detection of this disorder. Late presentations among patients with beta thalassemia and hemophilia and the necessity for more specialised genetic counselling were the commonest problems encountered.
...
PMID:Experience of a molecular genetics service in prenatal diagnosis by DNA analysis. 224 30

We report the cases of 38 children with transfusion-associated HIV infection: 18 hemophiliacs and 2 patients with Von Willebrand disease, 6 with hemoglobinopathies, 8 with malignant diseases or aplastic anemia, 2 transfused during neonatal period and 2 during a surgical operation. Two groups with a different prognosis were found: In group A [hemophilia and Von Willebrand disease (n = 20)] 17 patients were asymptomatic or only with lymphadenopathy; 3 reached stage IV and none died. In group B [Others (n = 14)] 2 patients were asymptomatic, 4 reached stage IV and 8 died, 4 of them directly from AIDS. The difference between both groups was statistically significant. Prognosis of HIV infection is particularly severe in patients with leukemia, malignant tumors and aplastic anemia.
...
PMID:[Infection by the HIV virus and transfusions. Study of 38 pediatric cases]. 259 49

Five patients with classic hemophilia were found to have primary pulmonary hypertension, a disorder not previously recognized in this population. All patients had had their coagulation disorder treated for 10 years or more with self-administered lyophilized concentrates of factor VIII, and all had antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Primary pulmonary hypertension was confirmed by histologic means at autopsy in one patient and by lung biopsy findings in another. In the other three patients, the findings are in agreement with this diagnosis. No patient had underlying cardiac or pulmonary disease, or clinical or pathologic evidence of collagen-vascular disease, vasculitis, parasitic disorders, hemoglobinopathy, or exposure to anorexigenic agents. Whether the primary pulmonary hypertension was related to treatment with lyophilized factor VIII, or to the presence of antibodies to HIV, or both, is unknown.
...
PMID:Primary pulmonary hypertension in patients with classic hemophilia. 280 26

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

The various etiologies of spontaneous hemarthrosis in adolescents and adults are reviewed: they include systemic diseases and local or regional disorders of the bones or joints. Among systemic diseases, the two main causes are coagulation disorders and hemoglobinopathies. Coagulation disorders may be either acquired (leukemia, thrombopenia, and hypoprothrombinemia induced by anticoagulant drugs with hemarthrosis being one of the major complications) or inherited (hemophilia which is not considered here, von Willebrand disease, and congenital thrombopathies). Hemoglobinopathies, particularly sickle-cell disease, are responsible for hemarthrosis in a few patients. Among local or regional disorders of the bones or joints, tumors such as hemangioma or synovial sarcoma are uncommon causes. Hemarthrosis is the main feature of pigmented villonodular synovitis. Hemarthrosis may occur in degenerative and metabolic diseases: while it is extremely rare in arthritis, it is frequently encountered in articular chondrocalcinosis which is the first diagnosis to consider when hemarthrosis occurs in an elderly patient. The search for an etiology, which is often difficult, should include a review of prior illnesses, a study of coagulation, and local clinical, radiological and biological investigations, with a study of the synovial fluid; in some instances, arthroscopy, synovial biopsy and even surgical exploration are required. Management includes rest, analgesics, antiinflammatory drugs and, above all, arthrocentesis which is essential for the prevention of articular damage and functional sequellae. Specific therapy is dependent on the etiology. In recurrent hemarthrosis, isotopic synoviorthesis may ensure lasting resolution of the effusion.
...
PMID:[Spontaneous hemarthrosis in adolescents and adults, excluding hemophilia]. 629 20

Primary hematologic disorders and the hematologic problems associated with systemic rheumatologic disease have widespread and significant implications for the clinical management of rheumatic disease. This article reviews recently published information on the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and management of hemoglobinopathies, hemophilia, and other hematologic pathologies associated with significant rheumatologic manifestations.
...
PMID:Sickle-cell disease, hemophilia, and hematology. 843 96

The rheumatologic manifestations of hemophilia and the hemoglobinopathies have been previously reviewed. Recent observations on the management and complications of these disorders are presented. Although rheumatologic manifestations are well recognized in leukemias and lymphomas, most of the observations have been based on small series of patients and case reports. This review focuses on leukemias and lymphomas, and brief reference is made to the myelodysplastic syndromes.
...
PMID:Rheumatologic features of hematologic disorders. 886 41

The hematology and oncology service at Birmingham Children's Hospital was established in the late 1960s and now is one of the largest in the United Kingdom. It provides comprehensive care for the entire range of childhood malignancies, coagulation disorders, and hemoglobinopathies and other hematological disorders, and undertakes bone marrow transplant and megatherapy/peripheral blood stem cell procedures. Research includes clinical trials of treatments of childhood cancers; molecular biology studies on leukemia, Hodgkin's disease, neuroblastoma, and sarconas; childhood cancer epidemiology, and geographical and racial incidence; and treatment of hemophilia and molecular investigation of coagulation disorders. These activities involve collaboration with local, national, and international research groups.
...
PMID:Pediatric oncology and hematology in Birmingham, England. 993 68

Little is known about treatment of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in "other groups" than the general population, namely patients with hematologic or renal disorders and patients with human immune deficiency (HIV) co-infection. The aim was to better define HCV therapies in these groups. We analyzed the medical literature focusing on treatment of HCV infection in other populations to suggest conclusions about indications based on tolerance and efficacy. As in the general population, the decision to treat should be based mainly on liver pathology, and to a lesser extent on virologic profiles (genotype, quantitative viremia). Hemophilia does not modify therapeutic strategies which combine interferon-alpha and ribavirin. Similar combinations should be discussed in patients with inherited hemoglobin disorders but iron overload (secondary hemochromatosis) associated with multiple transfusions may decrease the potential efficacy of interferon-alpha and chronic anemia may limit the use of ribavirin. In hemodialyzed patients, therapy by interferon-alpha is feasible with 3 MU subcutaneously after each hemodialysis three times weekly for 6-12 months. Virologic results are at least similar to those obtained in the general population with frequent pathological improvement. Combinations are not possible because ribavirin is contraindicated for pharmacokinetic reasons. In kidney recipients, interferon-alpha is deleterious and inefficient; ribavirin monotherapy has a potential interest which remains to be evaluated. In HIV co-infected patients, treatment is mandatory given the high rate of cirrhosis and the improved survival related to multiple anti-HIV therapies (which have no clear efficacy for quantitative HCV viremia). Due to the limited efficacy of interferon-alpha monotherapy, the combination of interferon-alpha and ribavirin appears to be the logical treatment. An important point is the in vitro inhibition of phosphorylation by ribavirin of HIV reverse transcriptase inhibitors which has to be analyzed in vivo before the combination can be recommended. On the basis of the results of liver biopsy, antiviral treatments may be proposed for HCV-infected patients with hematologic or renal disorders as well as for HIV co-infected patients. The choice of therapy (monotherapy or combined therapies) should be based on the clinical situation (contraindicated with chronic anemia or renal failure, for example) and its duration on the virologic factors of response as in the general population.
...
PMID:Treatment of chronic hepatitis C in special groups. 1062 89


1 2 3 Next >>