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)

To assess the influence of diminished oestrogen production on bone density, we studied 23 amenorrhoeic women and 20 controls (age range 16-29 years) divided into four groups: group 1: 6 patients with idopathic hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism with primary amenorrhoea (IHH); group 2: 5 patients with delayed puberty owing to thalassaemia major (TM); group 3: 12 patients with secondary hypothalamic amenorrhoea (HA); group 4: 20 women with normal menses (controls). Secondary sexual characteristics had developed in all except the women with TM. Groups 1 and 2 had never menstruated and group 3 had been amenorrhoeic for 6 months to 3 years. The control group was studied during the follicular phase of the cycle. None of the patients were taking oestrogens at the time of observation. Plasma concentrations were determined for 17 beta-oestradiol (E2), deidroepiandrosterone sulphate (DHEA-S), cortisol (F), prolactin (PRL), thyroid hormones (T3 and T4), and gonadotrophins (LH and FSH). Spinal bone mineral density (BMD g/cm2) was assessed by dual photon absorbiometry. BMD (mean +/- 1SD) was reduced in the patients (group 2: 0.920 +/- 0.95; group 1: 0.980 +/- 0.94; and group 3: 1.037 +/- 0.75) as compared with the controls (1.290 +/- 0.95) (P less than 0.01). In the three groups of patients, plasma E2 levels were lower than 50 pg/ml and were positively correlated with the BMD. As expected, plasma gonadotrophin levels were highly and significantly reduced (P less than 0.01) in the patients, compared with that of the controls. These results suggest that reduced spinal BMD in hypogonadic women may be related to the lack of oestrogenic influence on bone metabolism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Reduced spinal bone density in young women with amenorrhoea. 183 88

In 1989 we are continuing to move gene diagnosis over to the direct detection mode. We have sickle cell anemia, alpha-thalassemia, beta-thalassemia, Duchenne muscular dystrophy, Becker muscular dystrophy and cystic fibrosis moved to direct detection with hemophilia B and alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency soon to be there. For indirect detection, we still have hemophilia A, and a comment on the genetics of hemophilia A is important. Remember that sickle cell anemia is caused by one mutation, while beta-thalassemia and cystic fibrosis have a finite number of alleles. Duchenne muscular dystrophy results from a different mutation for every affected individual, but most of these are deletions and can be directly detected. Hemophilia A is another X-linked disorder with almost every affected individual having a different mutation. That means that there probably are 100 ways to get beta-thalassemia and about 10,000 ways to get hemophilia A, so we need some really good novel techniques to detect these directly, and we are working hard on such techniques. I would not be surprised if hemophilia A moved into the direct detection category in the next year or so. We need to find the Huntington disease gene, and then it will move into the direct detection column. Neurofibromatosis is still in the indirect detection group but also may move very soon. Polycystic kidney disease is also still in the indirect detection column. This summarizes where prenatal and presymptomatic gene diagnosis stands in late 1989.
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PMID:Current status of prenatal diagnosis by DNA analysis. 209 48

In this study, 50 thalassemia patients were tested using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) and in vivo neutron activation analysis (IVNAA) to determine their bone mineral status. Both techniques were suitable for this purpose. Lower age was found to correspond to lower liver iron content and higher bone mineral content in the normal range. Patients undergoing treatment with transfusion had higher bone mineral content. Osteopenic patients had higher hepatic iron content than those with normal bone status. In the case of DEXA, bone mineral content (BMC) divided by height cubed was found to be a better indicator of bone mineral status than the BMD usually given. Liver density as determined by DEXA correlates well with hepatic iron.
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PMID:A study on children's condition thalassemia using neutron activation analysis and other techniques. 771 Aug 41

Patients with beta-thalassemia major (beta-thalassemia) frequently have bone disorders of multifactorial etiology. We attempted to analyze the relationship between the bone mineral density ([BMD] measured by dual-photon absorptiometry) and auxanologic parameters, degree of siderosis, function of the growth hormone (GH)/insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I)/IGF-binding protein-3 (IGFBP3) axis, calcium-phosphate balance, parathyroid hormone (PTH), and cytokines (interleukin-1beta [IL-1] and tumor necrosis factor-alpha [TNF-alpha]) in 30 prepubertal children with beta-thalassemia major and 15 age-matched children with constitutional short stature (CSS), who have normal glucose tolerance and thyroid function. Children with beta-thalassemia had a significantly decreased BMD and mean BMD% for age and sex (0.75+/-0.24 g/cm2 and 71%+/-10%, respectively) versus children with CSS (1.06+/-0.3 g/cm2 and 92%+/-7%, respectively). Thalassemic patients had significantly lower circulating concentrations of IGF-I and IGFBP3 (49+/-21 ng/mL and 1.2+/-0.25 mg/L, respectively) compared with control children (153+/-42 ng/mL and 2.1+/-0.37 mg/L, respectively). The GH response to provocation by clonidine and glucagon was defective (peak GH < 7 microg/L) in 12 of the 30 thalassemic children. Serum concentrations of IL-1beta and TNF-alpha did not differ among the two study groups. Hypocalcemia was detected in five of the 30 thalassemic patients: hypoparathyroidism was diagnosed in two of the five and rickets in the other three. BMD was highly correlated with the circulating concentrations of IGF-I and IGFBP3, as well as with the auxanologic parameters (age, weight, height, height standard deviation score [HSDS], and body mass index [BMI]). It is suggested that increasing the circulating IGF-I concentration through aggressive nutritional therapy and/or GH/IGF-I therapy with supplementation with vitamin D and/or calcium might improve bone growth and mineralization and prevent the development of osteoporosis and consequent fractures in these patients. Such therapy requires blinded controlled trials.
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PMID:Bone mineral density in prepubertal children with beta-thalassemia: correlation with growth and hormonal data. 959 44

An increasing number of adult thalassaemics have been complaining of aches and pains of varying degrees of severity. In a minority the pains are debilitating and there is stiffness in movement. This study is an attempt to understand the osteoporosis of thalassaemia using DEXA and MRI as the main investigative tools. 122 patients with homozygous beta-thalassaemia were examined by DEXA. It was found that almost half had BMD below two standard deviations from the mean for the normal population, especially in the lumbar spine. There was no marked worsening with age. However the proportion of patients who had their first transfusion after the 3rd year (especially after the 6th) was significantly greater in those with the low BMD. There is also an excess of hypogonadic thalassaemics amongst those with low BMD. 72 thalassaemics were examined by MRI of marrow. Hypercellular, dark marrow on T1 weighted images found in young patients (20-30 yr) was replaced by fatty marrow in later life (30-40 yr). In a group of 21 older thalassaemics (33-62 yr) extreme bone marrow expansion was expressed by the reappearance of hypercellular areas, giving the impression of patchiness which affects not only the diaphyses but also the metaphyses. These patients mostly (66%) had thalassaemia intermedia and had started irregular transfusion after the 6th year of life. About 75% had a BMD below 2 SD. The conclusion is that patients who were late in receiving blood and especially those with thalassaemia intermedia had a more expanded bone marrow with pressure on cortical bone which caused pain in several cases. An attempt was made in 10 patients to reduce marrow hyperplasia by using hydroxyurea. Results showed a relief of pain and modification of magnetic signal intensity.
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PMID:Bone pain in thalassaemia: assessment of DEXA and MRI findings. 1009 Nov 46

The spectrum of disease causing mutations is immense. It just so happens that the overwhelming majority of genetic alterations in the APC gene with leads to adenomatous polyposis coli generate truncated gene products. This observation lead to the development of the in vitro synthesis protein assay (protein truncation test) which is a sensitive method to detect these truncated gene products from patient samples. This article describes the assay to detect truncated proteins for the APC gene, which can also be applied to other disease causing genetic alterations which commonly lead to truncations such in HNPCC, von Hippel-Lindau, osteogenesis imperfecta, retinoblastoma, BCRAI, beta-thalassemia, hemophilia B, Duchenene and Becker muscular dystrophy.
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PMID:Direct analysis for familial adenomatous polyposis mutations. 1187 75

Patients with beta-thalassaemia major are susceptible to osteopenia due to several factors which interfere with bone remodeling. It is known that bone metabolism and skeletal consolidation result from a complex sequence of hormonal changes, where the concerted actions of GH, IGF-I and sex hormones and their receptors, are responsible for the timing and attainment of skeletal consolidation. IGF-I and the corresponding binding protein (IGFBP-III), markers of bone metabolism and lumbar and femoral neck BMD were measured in 28 adult patients, undergoing hormonal replacement and chelation therapy and a hypertransfusion program, with beta-thalassaemia major (12 males with mean age 22.5+/-3.1 and 16 females with mean age 27.5+/-8.2), and in 28 healthy volunteers matched for age, anthropometric features and sex to the patients. BMD values, both at lumbar and femoral neck level were significantly lower (p<0.001 and p<0.05) by 18.7 and 4.2% respectively, in patients than in the controls. Markers of bone resorption [pyridinoline (Pyr) 78.1+/-15.7 vs 47.5+/-11.2 pmol/pmol urinary creatinine, p<0.001 and deoxypyridinoline (D-Pyr) 21.9+/-3.5 vs 14.5+/-5.4 pmol/ micromol urinary creatinine, p<0.001] were higher in patients than in controls, whereas the marker of bone formation was slightly lower [osteocalcin (BGP) 3.8+/-0.6 vs 4.6+/-1.7 pmol/ml, p<0.05]. Plasma levels of IGF-I (21.07+/-5.12 vs 35.25+/-8.33 nmol/ml, p<0.001) and IGF binding protein III (IGFBP-III) (1.9+/-0.4 vs 2.5+/-0.1 mg/ml, p<0.001) were lower in patients than in controls and positively correlated with BMD L2-L4 (r=0.57, p<0.05 and r=0.47, p<0.05 respectively), BMD neck (r=0.40, p<0.05 and r=0.34, p<0.05 respectively) and BGP (r=0.52, p<0.05 and r=0.34, p<0.05 respectively). Our beta-thalassaemic patients, in spite of normalizing hemoglobin levels, adequate hormone replacement and chelation therapies, showed osteopenia and an unbalanced bone turnover with an increased resorptive phase and a decreased formation phase probably correlated to low levels of IGF-I and IGFBP-III observed in our study.
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PMID:Osteoporosis and beta-thalassemia major: role of the IGF-I/IGFBP-III axis. 1203 Jun 5

A previous study described the establishment of human embryonic stem cell (ESC) lines from different sources of embryonic material, including morula, whole blastocyst and isolated inner cell mass. Using these methods, a repository of ESC lines has been established with different genetic abnormalities, which provides an unlimited source of disease cells in culture for undertaking research on the primary disturbances of the cellular processes in the genetically abnormal cells. ESC lines with genetic disorders were derived from the mutant embryos detected and avoided from transfer in the ongoing practice of preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD). The current repository contains 18 ESC lines with genetic disorders, including adrenoleukodystrophy, Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy, Fanconi anaemia, complementation group A, fragile-X syndrome, Huntington disease (three lines), Marfan syndrome, myotonic dystrophy (two lines), neurofibromatosis type I (five lines) and thalassaemia (two lines). These ESC lines are presently used for research purposes and may be available on request.
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PMID:Human embryonic stem cell lines with genetic disorders. 1570 4

Osteoporosis is an important cause of morbidity in beta-thalassemia patients. Bisphosphonates have been recently used for the treatment of osteoporosis in beta-thalassemia. This study is a prospective quasi-experimental study to assess the efficacy and safety of zoledronic acid in thalassemics with osteoporosis. Eighteen thalassemia patients with osteoporosis were given zoledronic acid 4 mg intravenously every 3 months over a period of 12 months. The efficacy of treatment was assessed by measuring (BMD) at the lumbar spine, femoral neck, and hip at baseline, 6, and 12 months. Z-score was used to measure the BMD. Other medical assessments included markers of bone formation and resorption (bone alkaline phosphatase (BAP), osteocalcin (OC), and urinary deoxypyridinoline), and the assessment of pain score, analgesic score, and performance score. Ten thalassemic osteoporotic patients were followed up only with serial BMDs as controls. Both groups had no significant difference with respect to age, gender, and baseline BMD. Patients taking zoledronic acid had a significant increase in their lumbar spine, femoral neck, trochanter, and total hip BMD measurements over the 12-month period. Patients in the control group did not have any significant change in BMD measurements. There was a significant change in the levels of OC and BAP over the 12-month follow-up period. There was also a significant decrease in the number of painful sites experienced by the patients. Treatment of thalassemic osteoporotic patients with zoledronic acid is very effective in increasing BMD at the lumbar spine and hip and in reducing pain; it is also well-tolerated.
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PMID:Intravenous zoledronic acid treatment in thalassemia-induced osteoporosis: results of a phase II clinical trial. 1683 Jan 43

Adults with beta thalassemia major frequently have low BMD, fractures, and bone pain. The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of low BMD, fractures, and bone pain in all thalassemia syndromes in childhood, adolescence, and adulthood, associations of BMD with fractures and bone pain, and etiology of bone disease in thalassemia. Patients of all thalassemia syndromes in the Thalassemia Clinical Research Network, > or =6 yr of age, with no preexisting medical condition affecting bone mass or requiring steroids, participated. We measured spine and femur BMD and whole body BMC by DXA and assessed vertebral abnormalities by morphometric X-ray absorptiometry (MXA). Medical history by interview and review of medical records, physical examinations, and blood and urine collections were performed. Three hundred sixty-one subjects, 49% male, with a mean age of 23.2 yr (range, 6.1-75 yr), were studied. Spine and femur BMD Z-scores < -2 occurred in 46% and 25% of participants, respectively. Greater age, lower weight, hypogonadism, and increased bone turnover were strong independent predictors of low bone mass regardless of thalassemia syndrome. Peak bone mass was suboptimal. Thirty-six percent of patients had a history of fractures, and 34% reported bone pain. BMD was negatively associated with fractures but not with bone pain. Nine percent of participants had uniformly decreased height of several vertebrae by MXA, which was associated with the use of iron chelator deferoxamine before 6 yr of age. In patients with thalassemia, low BMD and fractures occur frequently and independently of the particular syndrome. Peak bone mass is suboptimal. Low BMD is associated with hypogonadism, increased bone turnover, and an increased risk for fractures.
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PMID:Bone disease in thalassemia: a frequent and still unresolved problem. 1850 76


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