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)

Red-cell conversion of pyridoxine to pyridoxal phosphate was studied in control subjects, and patients with heterozygous and homozygous beta-thalassaemia. In 7% of control subjects the rate of pyridoxine conversion was well below the range found in the other control subjects (5.0-8.6%, mean 6.5%/g Hb x 10(-2)) but in heterozygous beta-thalassaemia was below that range in 63% of the patients. The conversion rate was also slow or borderline in the majority of patients with severe transfusion-dependent homozygous beta-thalassaemia, in spite of the presence of some donor cells; but was normal, or fast as in other anaemias, in all but one patient with mild homozygous thalassaemia. There was a much higher incidence of a slow conversion rate in the parents of the severe homozygotes than in parents of the mild homozygotes, illustrating the familial pattern. This supports our view that the red-cell conversion rate of pyridoxine is an inherited characteristic, independent of thalassaemia. The cause of a reduced rate of pyridoxine conversion was investigated. The increase to a normal rate following riboflavin ingestion suggests a defect in the activity of the flavin mononucleotide (FMN)-dependent pyridoxine phosphate oxidase.
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PMID:Abnormal red-cell metabolism of pyridoxine associated with beta-thalassaemia. 43 99

Red-cell conversion of pyridoxine to pyridoxal phosphate was measured in 12 families with thalassaemia and 2 normal families. A strong familial pattern was demonstrated and the evidence suggested that the rate of red-cell conversion of pyridoxine is an independently inherited characteristic.
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PMID:Family studies of red-cell metabolism of pyridoxine in beta-thalassaemia. 46 36

The rate of red-cell metabolism of pyridoxine to pyridoxal phosphate was measured in control subjects and patients with homozygous and heterozygous beta-thalassaemia from Ferrara, Northern Italy, and in British control subjects of Anglo-Saxon origin. A high incidence of a slow rate of B6 metabolism was found in beta-thalassaemia in Ferrara similar to that found previously in Cypriots living in London. Of particular interest was a much slower rate in control subjects from Ferrara than in British control subjects of Anglo-Saxon origin. The suggestion that a high incidence of a slow red-cell metabolism of B6 is the result of selection by malaria, whether associated with thalassaemia or not, is considered.
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PMID:Red-cell metabolism of pyridoxine in controls and beta-Thalassaemia in Ferrara, Northern Italy. 731 62