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Query: UMLS:C0039730 (
thalassemia
)
10,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
With enzyme immunoassay, maternal serum chorionic gonadotropin (MShCG) level was determined in 58 pregnancies affected with fetal homozygous alpha-
thalassemia
1. In 40 pregnancies with a gestational age of 10 to 14 weeks, 8 (20%) had an MShCG level above 2.5 multiples of the median (MoM); while in the other 18 pregnancies with a gestational age of 15 to 23 weeks, 14 (78%) had a level above 2.5 MoMs and none had a level below the median. Homozygous alpha-
thalassemia
1 of the fetus was associated with an elevated MShCG. Therefore in second-trimester screening for
Down's syndrome
by measurement of MShCG, homozygous alpha-
thalassemia
1 should also be considered if elevated MShCG levels are found.
...
PMID:Increased level of second trimester maternal serum chorionic gonadotropin in pregnancy with a fetus affected by homozygous alpha-thalassemia 1. 797 63
Three per cent of infants suffer from birth defects, (mostly genetic) including single gene diseases, such as cystic fibrosis or
thalassaemia
; chromosomal aneuploidies such as
Down syndrome
; or multifactorial conditions such as spina bifida and congenital heart defects. Perhaps the most important reason for focusing attention on genetics in 1997 is that the field has changed dramatically due to advances in technology and in our understanding of the human genome. New opportunities for prevention combined with more effective treatment, represent the new standard of care that the community has the right to expect for genetic disease. This article looks at antenatal diagnosis early in pregnancy and reviews what progress is to be expected in this field during the coming decade.
...
PMID:Detecting fetal abnormalities. 907 57
In Sardinia, fetal karyotyping for couples at risk for beta-
thalassaemia
is offered only to women >/=35 years and for specific risk of chromosomopathies. This policy is not easily accepted by the couples who incessantly request additional karyotyping. In order to select those at highest risk of chromosomal abnormalities among young women, fetal nuchal translucency (NT) thickness measurement was performed in 510 fetuses to assess the chromosomal risk before chorionic villus sampling. A risk >/=1/100 was judged positive and worthy of additional karyotyping. 126 cases interrupted the pregnancy after a result of homozygous beta-
thalassaemia
, hence 384 pregnancies were included in the study. 22 (5.7 per cent) fetuses were found NT positive. A total of three chromosomal abnormalities were detected. The NT test was positive in all three cases of chromosomopathies detected (100 per cent) and in 19 of 381 (4.98 per cent) normal karyotype fetuses. No features of major chromosomal abnormalities were reported among the newborns whose NT had resulted normal. These preliminary results have confirmed the efficacy of NT testing to assess the risk of
trisomy 21
and other chromosomopathies and enhanced its utility in pregnancies already suited to sampling in the first-trimester for Mendelian disorders.
...
PMID:Fetal nuchal translucency and prenatal diagnosis of beta-thalassaemia. 1045 23
India, like other developing countries, is facing an accelerating demographic switch to non-communicable diseases. In the cities congenital malformations and genetic disorders are important causes of morbidity and mortality. Due to the high birth rate in India a very large number of infants with genetic disorders are born every year almost half a million with malformations and 21,000 with
Down syndrome
. In a multi-centric study on the causes of referral for genetic counselling the top four disorders were repeated abortions (12.4%), identifiable syndromes (12.1%), chromosomal disorders (11.3%) and mental retardation (11%). In a more recent study in a private hospital the top reasons for referral were reproductive genetics (38.9%)--comprising prenatal diagnosis, recurrent abortions, infertility and Torch infections--mental retardation +/- multiple congenital anomalies (16.1%),
Down syndrome
(9.1%),
thalassemia
/haemophilia (8.8%), and muscle dystrophy/spinal muscular atrophy (8.4%). The disorders for which prenatal has been done over an 18-month-period are given. A recent study carried out in three centers (Mumbai, Delhi and Baroda) on 94,610 newborns by using a uniform proforma showed a malformation frequency of 2.03%, the commonest malformations are neural tube defects and musculo-skeletal disorders. The frequency of
Down syndrome
among 94,610 births was 0.87 per 1000, or 1 per 1150. Screening of 112,269 newborns for aminoacid disorders showed four disorders to be the commonest--tyrosinemia, maple syrup urine disease and phenylketonuria. Screening of cases of mental retardation for aminoacid disorders revealed four to be the commonest--hyperglycinemia, homocystinuria, alkaptonuria, and maple syrup urine disease. Metabolic studies of cases of mental retardation in AIIMS, Delhi and KEM Hospital, Mumbai, demonstrated that common disorders were those of mucopolysaccharides, lysosomes, Wilson disease, glycogen storage disease and galactosemia. It is estimated that beta-
thalassemia
has a frequency at birth of 1:2700, which means that about 9,000 cases of thalassemia major are born every year. Almost 5200 infants with sickle cell disease are born every year. Disorders, which deserve to be screened in the newborn period, are hypothyroidism and G-6-PD deficiency, while screening for aminoacid and other metabolic disorders could presently be restricted to symptomatic infants.
...
PMID:Burden of genetic disorders in India. 1126 88
Until recently, infectious diseases and malnutrition-related disorders constituted the major cause of ill health and mortality in the world population. However, advances in treatment of such disorders and increased understanding of the molecular basis of heredity have led to genetically transmitted conditions becoming a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Several disorders, including chromosomal (
Down syndrome
, Turner syndrome), single-gene (sickle-cell disease,
thalassaemia
, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, haemophilia, inborn errors of metabolism) and multifactorial disorders (coronary artery disease, arteriosclerosis, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, obesity) are common and becoming increasingly important. As there is no agreed-upon definitive cure with acceptable risk, these disorders are a significant burden on the health care delivery system. This is because the chronic nature of genetic diseases requires lifelong medical attention, expensive supportive and symptomatic therapy and specialist care. This review outlines the genetic disorders, their impact on health care delivery systems and the general framework required to prevent and control these disorders.
...
PMID:Spectrum of genetic disorders and the impact on health care delivery: an introduction. 1192 97
The family planning program is not restricted to population control; it also aims at the wider aspect of family welfare and human health. A large number of human diseases are due to genetic abnormalities. Examples are
mongolism
(
Down's syndrome
), ovarian dysgenesis (Turner's syndrome), nonfunctional testes (Klinefelter's syndrome), chronic myeloid leukemia, anemia,
thalassemia
, congenital malformations, and schizophrenia. Mental defects include imbeciles and the feebleminded. Constitutional diseases include diabetes, idiopathic epilepsy, pernicious anemia, and some thyroid abnormalities. Some chronic diseases also have a significant genetic component in their etiology, such as asthma and other allergies. About half of the stillbirths and embryonic wastage are suspected of being due to genetic malformations. Consanguinity has an important bearing on malformations and developmental anomalies. In India, where consanguinity is more frequent, malformations per 1000 births were 8.6 and 3.1 in 2 centers studied. Neural tube defects, harelip, cleft palate, and malformations of the gut and of limbs were prevalent. The population that needs genetic counseling is not large. Persons suffering from hereditary dise ases having a high risk of transmission should be advised to refrain fro m having children. A correct diagnosis, complete family history, and kn owledge of the literature on inherited disease is needed by the counselo rs. Family planning programs should include genetic counseling.
...
PMID:Genetic counselling in family planning. 1225 20
Cognitive disorders in children have traditionally been described in terms of clinical phenotypes or syndromes, chromosomal lesions, metabolic disorders, or neuropathology. Relatively little is known about how these disorders affect the chemical reactions involved in learning and memory. Experiments in fruit flies, snails, and mice have revealed some highly conserved pathways that are involved in learning, memory, and synaptic plasticity, which is the primary substrate for memory storage. These can be divided into short-term memory storage through local changes in synapses, and long-term storage mediated by activation of transcription to translate new proteins that modify synaptic function. This review summarizes evidence that disruptions in these pathways are involved in human cognitive disorders, including neurofibromatosis type I, Coffin-Lowry syndrome, Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome, Rett syndrome, tuberous sclerosis-2,
Down syndrome
, X-linked alpha-
thalassemia
/mental retardation, cretinism, Huntington disease, and lead poisoning.
...
PMID:Learning, memory, and transcription factors. 1259 82
With a very large population and high birth rate, and consanguineous marriage favoured in many communities, there is a high prevalence of genetic disorders in India. An estimated 495,000 infants with congenital malformations, 390,000 with G6PD deficiency, 21,400 with
Down syndrome
, 9,000 with beta-
thalassaemia
, 5,200 with sickle cell disease, and 9,760 with amino acid disorders are born each year. The prevalence of late-onset multi-factorial disorders (including coronary artery disease, hypertension and psychiatric disorders) is also large. Due to inadequate diagnostic, management and rehabilitation facilities, the burden of these disorders is greater than in Western countries. Although genetic diseases receive little attention from the health services, research funding by the government has been liberal. Community control of common disorders like
thalassaemia
,
Down syndrome
, neural tube defects, and muscular dystrophies deserves high priority, and genetic services should be integrated into the existing primary health care and medical services. Most genetic counselling would have to be provided through training physicians who staff the district and medical school hospitals. To ensure future progress, there is a need to establish additional departments of medical genetics in medical schools.
...
PMID:The burden of genetic disorders in India and a framework for community control. 1496 Aug 91
For the last century, there has been great physiological interest in brain iron and its role in brain function and disease. It is well known that iron accumulates in the brain for people with Huntington's disease, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis, chronic hemorrhage, cerebral infarction, anemia,
thalassemia
, hemochromatosis, Hallervorden-Spatz,
Down syndrome
, AIDS and in the eye for people with macular degeneration. Measuring the amount of nonheme iron in the body may well lead to not only a better understanding of the disease progression but an ability to predict outcome. As there are many forms of iron in the brain, separating them and quantifying each type have been a major challenge. In this review, we present our understanding of attempts to measure brain iron and the potential of doing so with magnetic resonance imaging. Specifically, we examine the response of the magnetic resonance visible iron in tissue that produces signal changes in both magnitude and phase images. These images seem to correlate with brain iron content, perhaps ferritin specifically, but still have not been successfully exploited to accurately and precisely quantify brain iron. For future quantitative studies of iron content we propose four methods: correlating R2' and phase to iron content; applying a special filter to the phase to obtain a susceptibility map; using complex analysis to extract the product of susceptibility and volume content of the susceptibility source; and using early and late echo information to separately predict susceptibility and volume content.
...
PMID:Imaging iron stores in the brain using magnetic resonance imaging. 1573 84
GATA family transcription factors play essential roles in broad developmental settings. GATA-1, one of the hematopoietically expressed members, is required for normal erythroid and megakaryocytic differentiation. Over the past few years, mutations in the gene encoding GATA-1 have been linked to several human hematologic disorders, including X-linked dyserythropoietic anemia and thrombocytopenia, X-linked thrombocytopenia and beta-
thalassemia
, and
Down syndrome
acute megakaryoblastic leukemia. This review summarizes the role of GATA-1 during normal hematopoiesis and discusses how disease-associated mutations may affect its function.
...
PMID:GATA transcription factors in hematologic disease. 1615 17
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