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

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.
...
PMID:Genetic disorders in Southern Africa. 95 24

We present what we believe to be the first reported association between retinal angiomatosis and Stardgardt's disease (Gass type 3). We have had the opportunity of following photographically a patient for the last eleven years. The earliest photos showed the macular problem whilst the latter shots showed the presence of a capillary angioma involving the temporal part of the optic disc and the adjacent retina of the left eye. We believe that this tumour arose in previously normal tissue. Examination and investigation of the patient revealed a peripapillary choroidal rupture at the site of the angioma, thalassaemia minor, retinitis pigmentosa, mildly dilated lateral ventricles, hepatic angiomata and a negative family history apart from a younger sister who was mildly retarded and showed an identical fundal picture of Stargardt's disease. Later examination revealed a small peripheral angioma inferiorly in the same eye. The diagnostic and management problems will be discussed.
...
PMID:[Retinal angiomatosis in association with Stargardt's disease. A case report]. 270 Nov 4

The frequency, distribution pattern and localisation of gamma radiation-induced break points on the chromosomes of patients with various inherited metabolic disorders were studied to detect: (i) whether the break point distribution following irradiation is random and proportional to the length or the DNA content of the chromosome, or non-proportionally distributed on their length and at times clustering to form hot spots on certain region of the chromosomes; and (ii) to find whether there exists a syndrome-related chromosome-specific pattern of radiation-induced break points. Lymphocyte cultures from patients of haemophilia, ichthyosis, Duchenne muscular dystrophy, retinitis pigmentosa and alpha-thalassemia, whose defective gene loci were located by DNA probe method, were subjected to 3Gy of gamma radiation at G(0). The chromosomal break point analysis was carried out on all the 23 types of chromosomes (excluding Y chromosome) using G banding and FISH painting. The exact location of the break points on G-banded chromosomes was identified using a semi-automated microscope densitometer system (Leitz MPV2). In normal individuals in all the chromosomes except the chromosome 1, a random distribution of break points proportional to their length based on their DNA content was observed. However, in all the syndromes studied a mixture of hypersensitive chromosomes with a non-random distribution pattern of chromosomal break points invariably clustering to form hot spots, and chromosomes with random distribution of break points proportional to their length were observed. The hypersensitive chromosomes and their hot spots were syndrome-specific.
...
PMID:Syndrome-related chromosome-specific radiation-induced break points of various inherited human metabolic disorders. 1283 62

A 34-year-old woman presented with new intermittent short lasing headache around the left eye accompanied with lacrimation. She suffered from anemia and visual disturbance due to thalassaemia beta heterotype and retinitis pigmentosa. She also had continual cephalalgia from about 9 years old, and was taking nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug almost every day. After the medical treatment, we diagnosed her headache as migraine without aura, medication overuse headache (MOH) and short lasting unilateral neuralgiform headache attacks with cranial autonomic symptoms (SUNA). Triptan was effective for a migraine headache, but it was ineffective for attacks of SUNA, while topiramate dramatically reduced the SUNA attacks. A headache diary was effective to evaluate the clinical course and the effect of treatment for two different types of headaches by devising the approach to description. A migraine and MOH may coexist with SUNA, and our attention should be paid to the diagnosis and medical treatment in such cases.
...
PMID:[A Japanese SUNA patient with migraine without aura and medication overuse headache responsive to topiramate]. 2409 23