Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0039730 (thalassemia)
10,305 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cape Town has a Greek community of about 5000, of whom approximately 75% originate from the island of Lesbos. In a survey of inherited haematological conditions in this population, 250 unrelated volunteers were investigated. The prevalence of heterozygous beta-thalassaemia was found to be 6.4%, with a gene frequency of 0.033. G6PD deficiency was detected in 10 males and it can be estimated that the prevalence in the male members of this population is 6.7%, with a gene frequency of 0.067. Hereditary spherocytosis was found in three respondents and this represents a prevalence of 1.2%, with a gene frequency of 0.006. One subject was heterozygous for the sickle cell trait (HbS) and another volunteer had haemoglobin Lepore, which had already been diagnosed in Greece. Our findings with respect to beta-thalassaemia and G6PD deficiency are similar to those reported from regions in Greece where malaria is not highly endemic.
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PMID:Inherited anaemias in the Greek community of Cape Town. 46 97

Fetal haemoglobin (HbF) levels have been measured in 137 normal (AA) subjects, 109 with the sickle-cell trait (AS) and 237 with sickle-cell anaemia (SS) from the oasis population of Eastern Saudi Arabia. In addition the proportion of F-cells has been estimated in 71 AA, 51 AS and 34 SS subjects. The mean HbF% (and the range of F-cells %) were: AA 0.77 (0.3--18), AS 1.38 (2.3--43) and SS 25.56 (33--98). The distribution of Hb F was always heterocellular. The influence of pregnancy accounts for most of the excess female subjects with sickle-cell trait showing raised Hb F and F-cells. Whilst the normal Arabs and those with sickle-cell trait did not differ from comparable groups of American blacks, both the % Hb F and % F-cells in Saudi Arabian patients with sickle-cell anaemia were much higher than in Blacks. The high Hb F levels in individuals with sickle-cell anaemia are not due to coexistent glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency or alpha-thalassaemia trait, and the Hb F level showed an inverse correlation with the degree of haemolysis. These findings indicate that the unusually elevated levels of Hb F are not due to an associated high frequency of a gene for hetero-cellular hereditary persistence of fetal haemoglobin in the oasis population, but rather from a genetically determined absolute increase in Hb F production related in some way to the SS genotype.
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PMID:Fetal haemoglobin production and the sickle gene in the oases of Eastern Saudi Arabia. 74 27

The occurrence of different types of hemoglobin variants in India has been well-documented in urban populations and in certain tribal areas. Beta-thalassaemia and hemoglobins D,E,H,S, and rare variants like Hb Lepore, have been found in varying percentages. There is a higher incidence of Hb E in the Eastern region and of Hb D in certain Northern populations. The association of Hb E with beta thalassaemia G6PD deficiency has been established. The relationship with other environmental factors, like malaria, is not yet clear.
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PMID:Hemoglobin variants in India. 75 79

Certain uncommon genetic disorders occur relatively frequently in the various population groups of Southern Africa. Prominent among these are porphyria, colonic polyposis and sclerosteosis in the Afrikaner community, Huntington's chorea in the British, Gaucher's and Tay-Sachs diseases in the Jewish population, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency (G-6-PD deficiency) and thalassaemia in the Greek community, various skeletal dysplasias in the Black group, lipoid proteinosis and cleidocranial dysostosis in the Cape Coloured population, diabetes mellitus in the Indian community and retinitis pigmentosa in the Tristan da Cunha islanders. In addition, 'private' syndromes have been encountered in virtually every group. Awareness of the ethnic distribution of unusual genetic conditions is of considerable practical importance during the differential diagnosis of obscure disease.
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PMID:Genetic disorders in Southern Africa. 95 24

Many complex forces are at work during adolescence which can contribute to the occurrence of anemia. Careful consideration of the entire patient should enable a physician to identify the unusual as well as the more common causes of anemia in this age group. Anemia in teenage girls is primarily due to menstrual iron loss. In boys, borderline diets and the demands of rapid growth predominate as causative factors. Hemoglobinopathies (thalassemia, sickle cell disease), G6PD deficiency, infectious mononucleosis, and illicit drug use account for small proportions of cases.
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PMID:Anemia in adolescence. 2. Hemoglobinopathies and other causes. 110 36

The frequency of PC allele for acid phosphatase in fourteen Sardinian villages correlates positively with the altitude and negatively with past malarial morbidity and GdMed prevalence. The susceptibility towards hemolytic favism in Sardinian males with G6PD deficiency is dependent on the erythrocyte acid phosphatase and thalassemia phenotypes. Thalassemia trait exerts a protective action only in subjects carrying PA allele for acid phosphatase. The data suggest that the gradient for malaria morbidity directly or indirectly, through interactions with thalassemia and G6PD polymorphisms, mediated by the habit of eating Vecia faba, may have had a significant role in determining the heterogeneous distribution of acid phosphatase polymorphism in Sardinia. Besides malaria, other environmental factors related with altitude seem to have been very important in shaping the present pattern of distribution of both acid phosphatase and G6PD polymorphisms in Sardinia.
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PMID:Red cell acid phosphatase: another polymorphism correlated with Malaria? 118 Mar 55

Sickle cell haemoglobin (Hb S) occurs at a high frequency in the Eastern (EP), South-Western (SWP) and North-Western (NWP) Provinces of Saudi Arabia and the presentation of the Hb S is believed to exhibit clinical diversity in the different regions. Three areas of Saudi Arabia were screened to determine the frequency of Hb S and alpha- and beta-thalassaemias and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency genes. Furthermore, in an attempt to investigate and compare the clinical and haematological presentation of sickle cell disease (SCD) in the different regions of Saudi Arabia, the individuals identified as Hb S homozygotes were investigated further. The patients were further classified on the basis of whether there was associated alpha- or beta-thalassaemia. A severity index (SI) was calculated for each patient and the clinical presentations and laboratory findings were compared. The results showed significantly variable severity of SCD in patients from different regions. The patients from the EP generally had a mild clinical presentation, while in the SWP and NWP majority of the patients suffered from a severe disease as judged by the SI. No correlation could be established between Hb F level and SI, though the WBC level correlated positively with the SI. The lowest SI values were encountered in patients with associated alpha-thalassaemia who also had the lowest WBC count and MCV and the highest RBC count and packed cell volume.
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PMID:Heterogeneity and variation of clinical and haematological expression of haemoglobin S in Saudi Arabs. 128 1

The "eradication of malaria" in Taiwan was announced by WHO in 1965. From 1966 to 1989, 919 malaria cases were detected in Taiwan. Of these cases, 803 were classified as imported malaria. During 1977 to 1989, our hospital collected 11 cases of imported malaria, 6 of Plasmodium falciparum (PF), including 1 suspicious case, 2 of Plasmodium vivax (PV), 1 of mixed infection (PF plus PV), and 2 unclassified. Most of the patients presented clinically with fever and chills. Hepatosplenomegaly was the most common abnormal finding during the physical examination. Jaundice and anemia occurred in the more severe cases. No cases had lymphadenopathy which is helpful in making a differential diagnosis. Six cases had thrombocytopenia which may be considered as an indirect sign in the diagnosis. The MCV levels were within normal limits in all of the cases. This may indirectly imply a potential protective effect against malaria infection in cases of congenital hemoglobinopathy such as thalassemia or G6PD deficiency. Initially, 10 cases were given "standard treatment", which consisted of chloroquine 450 mg qd for 2 days then 300 mg qd for 2 days and primaquine 15 mg qd for 2 weeks. Four cases of chloroquine resistance were encountered, all in cases with PF infection. Two cases were grade I delayed type resistance and were successfully treated with Fansidar, tetracycline and quinine. Two cases were grade II resistance and presented clinically as cerebral malaria. Intravenous quinine was given plus Fansidar and tetracycline. The cases were resolved without sequele or recurrence. None of the cases, except for 2, received chemoprophylaxis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Imported case of malaria in Taiwan: analysis of 11 cases]. 167 9

This study was conducted on 429 blood samples collected from Saudi males and females from Al-Ula in the north-western province of Saudi Arabia in order to determine the frequency of the sickle cell gene, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency gene, and alpha- and beta-thalassaemia genes, and to investigate the pattern of their interactions. The frequency of the sickle cell gene was 0.0785, while that of the beta-thalassaemia gene was 0.1195. Heterozygous alpha-thalassaemia 2 (- alpha/alpha alpha) was encountered at a frequency of 0.121, while homozygous alpha-thalassaemia 2 (- alpha/- alpha) occurred at a frequency of 0.0046. HbH disease and hydrops fetalis were not encountered. One case with triple alpha-gene arrangement, alpha alpha alpha anti-3.7, was identified. The G6PD deficiency gene frequency was 0.08 and 0.032 in males and females, respectively. Several cases with 2 abnormal genes were encountered. The haematological and biochemical data from the patients with sickle cell disease suggest that the disease in this population is more severe in comparison with cases reported from the eastern population.
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PMID:Patterns of sickle cell, thalassaemia and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency genes in north-western Saudi Arabia. 205 Mar 79

Sickle cell disease (SCD) occurs at a high prevalence in different parts of Saudi Arabia. Several reports indicate that the disease follows a mild clinical course in the Saudi population of the eastern province of Saudi Arabia, while little is known about the disease in other parts of the country. This study was conducted on 53 children from the Saudi Arabian south-western province with sickle cell disease and 53 age- and sex-matched normal controls (haemoglobin AA phenotype). A statistically significant difference was encountered in the haematological parameters investigated in the two groups. The SCD patients were divided into subgroups with high and low Hb F levels, alpha- and beta-thalassaemia and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-PD) deficiency. The haematological parameters were then compared in the different sub-groups. No significant difference could be demonstrated in the haematological parameters in patients with a high or low Hb F level. In patients without thalassaemia, the red cell count, total haemoglobin and haematocrit were significantly lower, while MCV, MCH and MCHC were higher. G-6 PD deficiency existed in association with thalassaemias, and apart from a reduction in MCV and MCH, no other statistically significant difference could be demonstrated. Clinical examination revealed a severe disease with several cases suffering from the hand and foot syndrome.
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PMID:On the nature of sickle cell disease in the south-western province of Saudi Arabia. 243 51


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