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)

Over a period of one year the blood samples collected for phenylketonuria testing from 7691 Manchester newborns were screened by haemoglobin electrophoresis. An abnormality was detected in 47 (0-61%) of the babies. No cases of homozygous haemoglobinopathy were found. The overall incidence of sickle-cell trait was 0-38%, but for the Black population it was 10%. Four Black babies and one White baby had alpha-thalassaemia. No other haemoglobinopathies were found in the White babies and no Asian baby had alpha-thalassaemia. Haemoglobin A2 was precociously developed in three babies, two of whom were coloured--probably a further example of the earlier maturity of coloured babies. The screening programme was stopped when it became cleaasily be combined with screening for metabolic disease in places where the incidence of haemoglobinopathies is higher.
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PMID:Neonatal screening for haemoglobinopathy. Results in 7691 Manchester newborns. 125 57

Using the recent developments of molecular biology techniques, our laboratory is offering carrier and prenatal diagnosis for a variety of genetic disorders including cystic fibrosis, phenylketonuria, thalassaemia alpha and beta, sickle cell anaemia, myotonic dystrophy, von Recklinghausen's disease, autosomal polycystic kidney disease, haemophilia A and B, Martin-Bell syndrome (fragile X), Becker and Duchenne muscular dystrophy, etc. It is likely that the rapid advances made in the establishment of the human genetic map will considerably expand the spectrum of diseases for which diagnosis by molecular genetics will become available.
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PMID:[Molecular and diagnostic genetics]. 219 51

Dot blot analysis on enzymatically amplified trophoblast DNA with allele specific oligonucleotide probes is currently used for the prenatal diagnosis of single gene disorders characterised at the molecular level, such as the beta thalassaemias, phenylketonuria, sickle cell anaemia, and alpha 1-anti-trypsin deficiency. A potential problem with the use of this procedure is the co-amplification of maternal sequences, which may obscure the diagnosis in the fetus. To address this question, we carried out prenatal diagnosis of beta thalassaemia in 300 couples at risk by dot blot analysis on enzymatically amplified DNA with 32P or horseradish peroxidase labelled allele specific oligonucleotide probes. We verified the diagnosis obtained by this procedure with oligonucleotide hybridisation on electrophoretically separated non-amplified trophoblast DNA fragments. We detected no co-amplified maternal sequences, even with a faint signal, in the dot blot of trophoblast DNA from those fetuses diagnosed as normal or homozygotes, nor in those diagnosed as heterozygotes, who were born to parents carrying different mutations and had inherited the paternal mutation. These results indicate that, when careful dissection of trophoblast tissue from maternal decidua is carried out, amplification of chorionic villi DNA is not associated with amplification of maternal DNA sequences. We may thus conclude that dot blot analysis of trophoblast DNA is a very reliable procedure for prenatal diagnosis.
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PMID:Reliability of prenatal diagnosis of genetic diseases by analysis of amplified trophoblast DNA. 232 4

Gene probes can now be used to detect a variety of mutations that produce single-gene disorders. In present clinical practice, restriction endonuclease analysis is used for the prenatal diagnosis of sickle cell anemia, alpha-thalassemia, and beta-thalassemia. Direct detection of the mutation is possible in alpha-thalassemia, where a deletion has usually occurred, and in sickle cell anemia, where the mutation alters the recognition sequence of the restriction endonuclease, Mst II. Indirect detection of beta-thalassemia is based on using normal variations in DNA (DNA polymorphisms) to track normal and affected beta-globin genes in families. This latter kind of analysis is also useful in detecting the phenylalanine hydroxylase genes affected in phenylketonuria and will often be used in disorders where the mutations are unknown. In cases where the mutation is known, direct analysis by use of oligonucleotide probes is a new and important advance. An example of this type of gene detection in a family with classical hemophilia is presented. In addition, with chorion villus biopsy, detection of these inherited diseases is feasible by the 12th week of pregnancy.
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PMID:Gene probes: application to prenatal and postnatal diagnosis of genetic disease. 299 40

Newborn screening for sickle cell disease has been recommended as a method of decreasing patient mortality. However, its effectiveness in accomplishing this has not been reliably measured. To help determine the effectiveness, 10 years of experience in newborn screening have been summarized. The effects of early patient enrollment in a comprehensive treatment program on long-term morbidity and mortality are reported. From 1975 to 1985, 84,663 newborns were screened regardless of race or ethnic background. Bart's hemoglobin was present in 5%, hemoglobin AS in 2.6%, and hemoglobin AC in 0.75%. Excluding Bart's, approximately 3.6% of all newborns were carriers for hemoglobinopathy. Sickle cell disease occurred in 1:951 births (58 hemoglobin SS, 25 hemoglobin FSC, three hemoglobin S-beta +-thalassemia, and three hemoglobin S-beta O-thalassemia). In addition, one in every 4,233 newborns had a clinically significant thalassemia syndrome (eight hemoglobin FE, ten hemoglobin F only, two hemoglobin H). Compared with other newborn screening programs in California, (congenital hypothyroidism, 1:3,849; phenylketonuria 1:22,474, galactosemia 1:74,103), hemoglobinopathies are the most prevalent congenital disease. Eighty-one newborns with sickle cell disease were followed for 7.2 years. Patients experienced 513 hospitalizations, including 13 episodes of sepsis with or without meningitis and ten acute sequestration crises. The overall mortality rate for patients with sickle cell anemia diagnosed in the newborn period was 1.8%. In comparison, the clinical course of 64 patients with sickle cell anemia diagnosed after 3 months of age and followed for an average of 9.4 years was analyzed. Five of these patients died. In two of these, sickle cell anemia was diagnosed at the time of the death.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Newborn screening for sickle cell disease: effect on mortality. 336 74

The liver in an infant or child is as liable to the same pathologies afflicting the adult liver but with certain differences in prevalence and causes. Genetic disorders are more likely to present in the paediatric age group where many involve metabolic processes such as galactosemia, phenylketonuria, glycogen storage disease and others. Many of these present in the newborn period. However, neoplasms and hamartomas also present in the newborn period, such as congenital neuroblastoma with an enormously enlarged liver, hepatoblastoma and haemangioma. The latter may present with intractable cardiac failure as a result of considerable shunting of blood. Acquired liver lesions often present in the newborn period or early infancy and this includes hepatitis and biliary atresia. The difficulties in the differentiation of the two lesions will be discussed together with the management of biliary atresia. As the child grows older, Reyes encephalopathy with microvesicular fat in the liver is not uncommon. The pathophysiology of Reyes encephalopathy as seen locally will be described. The choledochal cyst with direct (Caroli's disease) or indirect effect on the liver will be described. Problems of childhood portal hypertension as well as congenital hepatic fibrosis will be described. Hemosiderosis of the liver is chiefly seen in homozygous beta-thalassaemia patients who have been kept alive with repeated blood transfusions. Amoebic and pyogenic hepatitis, fatty liver due to protein malnutrition, biliary ascariasis, etc, which are common in tropical and subtropical countries are rarely seen now in Singapore children.
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PMID:Paediatric liver disorders in Singapore. 346 38

Abnormal haemoglobins produce a variety of anaemias which range in effect from being very mild to lethal. The most common of these are the sickle cell disorders and thalassaemias. In London, thalassaemia affects 3.5% of the Maltese population, 2.5% of the Italian population and 1.5% of the West Indian population respectively. Seventeen per cent of the Cypriot population carry a thalassaemia gene. Sickle cell disease occurs in 500:100,000 people in Britain's black population but is not exclusive to people of Afro-Caribbean origin. The gene is carried by 1 in 10 people. Sickle cell disease is statistically more prevalent among the host population than is phenylketonuria (10-12:100,000), hypothyroidism (20:100,000) and cystic fibrosis (62-63:100,000) in the general population. Although these diseases are routinely screened for at birth, there is no general strategy among district health authorities for sickle cell screening. It has been shown that of 76 health districts with a 3+% ethnic minority population, 30 of which have an ethnic minority population of 'over 10%', only 6 have a comprehensive health care policy for people with sickle cell disease.
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PMID:Sickle cell disease: implications for nursing care. 364 62

Contrary to earlier reports from Asia, trisomy 21 is common in Burma and other chromosome abnormalities are found. A variety of dominant, recessive and X-linked genetic disorders occur. Twins are found in 1% of births and MZ and DZ twins are equally common. Thalassaemia and meningomyelocele are relatively common while congenital dislocation of the hip and phenylketonuria are very rare. The intensity of inbreeding had been measured by survey and found to be F = 0.0005 in Rangoon and F = 0.0015 in villages around Hlegu.
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PMID:Human genetics in Burma. 646 Jun 83

During 1978-81 there were about 43,500 births in Birmingham, of which 10.3% were to Negroes and 22.6% to Asians. Cellulose acetate electrophoresis of red cell haemolysates from capillary specimens collected for phenylketonuria screening was performed for these babies to assess the feasibility, cost, and benefits of detecting sickle haemoglobinopathies early. Eight babies had important haemoglobinopathies; four were homozygotes for haemoglobin S (HbS), three were mixed heterozygotes for HbS and haemoglobin C (HbC), and one had haemoglobin E (HbE) and beta-thalassemia. Also, 534 (1.19%) were heterozygotes for HbS or haemoglobin D (HbD) and 205 (0.46%) for HbC or HbE, 453 (1.01%) were heterozygotes with a fast-moving band, one was a heterozygote for haemoglobin Norfolk, and one a heterozygote for both HbS and haemoglobin G Philadelphia. The cost of neonatal screening for haemoglobinopathies was 12.5 p per baby (705 pounds for each serious abnormality).
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PMID:Neonatal screening for sickle haemoglobinopathies in Birmingham. 680 55

The current state of molecular diagnosis of some common genetic diseases, including cystic fibrosis, Duchenne muscular dystrophy, haemophilia A and B, phenylketonuria, and thalassaemia, in Russia and elsewhere in the former USSR is reviewed. Data on carrier detection and prenatal diagnosis are presented and some objective problems and obstacles hampering efficient molecular diagnosis in Russia are discussed. The necessity for molecular diagnosis of some other inherited diseases (for example, von Willebrand's disease, Martin-Bell syndrome, polycystic kidney disease, Huntington's disease, and myotonic dystrophy) is stressed. The need for establishing new diagnostic centres dealing with the most common diseases, as well as rare genetic diseases, is substantiated. Perspectives on the implementation of new molecular methods and new technical approaches (preimplantation embryo diagnosis, fetal cells selected from maternal blood) are briefly outlined.
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PMID:Molecular diagnosis of some common genetic diseases in Russia and the former USSR: present and future. 844 19


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