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)

Seven patients had sickle cell trait (hemoglobin AS) and vasoproliferative retinopathy. The retinal abnormalities in these seven patients were indistinguishable from those seen in patients with clinically significant sickling hemoglobinopathies (sickle cell-hemoglobin C disease, hemoglobin S-thalassemia disease, and sickle cell anemia). All seven patients also had some evidence of associated systemic disease such as diabetes, syphilis, tuberculosis, or sarcoidosis. In the presence of an associated systemic disease, marked retinopathy can occur in the ordinarily benign condition of sickle cell trait.
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PMID:Proliferative retinopathy in sickle cell trait. Report of seven cases. 84 50

EEG signal analysis could be very helpful in the detection of signs of adverse reaction to the brain by a systemic disease. We performed an EEG spectral analysis in 12 young patients with thalassemia before and after their regular blood transfusion, and in 10 volunteer students. Our aim was to test if the EEG analysis could detect signs of brain dysfunction due to the cerebral hypoxia as a result of the anemia. We analyzed the EEG signals on line using a dedicated computer system estimating the power of the delta, theta, alpha, sigma and beta bands of the EEG. After transfusion, the power spectral density of the alpha band showed a significant enhancement in most areas of the brain, in the group of the thalassemia patients as compared to the normals. These differences correlated with the levels of hemoglobin of the patients, and possibly reflect the degree of oxygenation of the brain. Since the visual interpretation of the EEG is not efficient for estimating the brain dysfunction in the anemic state in thalassemia, the signal analysis of the EEG may provide a more sensitive alternative to study the effects of hypoxia on brain function.
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PMID:The effect of blood transfusion on alpha EEG activity in thalassemic patients. 204 25

Screening of 7500 children aged between 5.8 and 14.4 years, out of a total population of 39,690 in this age group in the Rehovot region, revealed 111 children with heights 2.5 SD below the mean for their age, according to the Tanner-Whitehouse standards. Included among these short children were eight with hypochondroplastic skeletal disease, two with Down's syndrome, four with thalassaemia, four with Turner's syndrome, three with coeliac disease, four with classical growth hormone (GH) deficiency, four with intrauterine growth retardation, four with systemic disease and 78 without obvious underlying causes. In 35 of the 78 children in the last group, the 24-hour integrated concentration of GH was in the hypopituitary range (less than 3.2 ng/ml), and GH neurosecretory dysfunction (NSD) was accordingly diagnosed. This represents an incidence of GH neurosecretory dysfunction of 45% among abnormally short children without underlying pathology, and is consistent with the authors' previous findings. The overall frequency of GH neurosecretory dysfunction in the screened population was 4/1000.
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PMID:Incidence of neurosecretory dysfunction among children aged 6-14 years in Rehovot, Israel. 275 May 34

Systemic disease, either genetic or acquired, may prevent or decrease the severity of another disease. These observations have led to important therapeutic advances. The best-known examples are Edward Jenner's use in 1798 of cowpox to prevent smallpox and J.B. Haldane's 1942 observation that erythrocyte disorders such as thalassemia and sickle cell disease modify the severity of malaria. Patients with and carriers of cystic fibrosis may have genetic resistance to tuberculosis and/or secretory diarrhea. The beneficial effects of undernutrition have led to therapeutic diets for seizures, celiac disease, type 2 diabetes, and inflammatory bowel disease. Finasteride for prostatic hypertrophy was developed after the observation that patients with male pseudohermaphrodism resulting from 5-alpha-reductase mutations do not develop prostatic hypertrophy. Rh immunoglobulin for Rh hemolytic disease prevention followed the observation that ABO incompatibility prevented Rh sensitization. The natural immunosuppression of measles may cause remission of nephrosis, and that of leprosy prevents psoriasis. Patients with one form of agammaglobulinemia (X-linked) never get Epstein-Barr virus infection, and patients with another form (common variable) are seemingly cured by HIV infection. HIV/AIDS is prevented or modified by co-receptor mutations (notably the CCRDelta32 chemokine mutation), HIV-2, or GB virus C infection. Additional exploration of these genetic, infectious, and metabolic influences on disease severity may provide new therapeutic approaches to HIV and other diseases.
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PMID:Disease versus disease: how one disease may ameliorate another. 1639 76