Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0240066 (iron deficiency)
7,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In a random population of 198 pregnant women, detailed haematological determinations were performed at delivery. The prevalence of anaemia (haemoglobin less than 10 g/100 ml) is 20%. Iron deficiency is even more frequent. Malaria is shown to play an important role. Maternal anaemia is also correlated with nutritional status. Primiparae are shown to be at higher risk of anaemia. The effect of maternal anaemia on anthropometric and haematological variables of the newborn are discussed. Mothers with sickle-cell or HbC trait are not at special risk of anaemia.
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PMID:Maternal anaemia in Abidjan--Its influence on placenta and newborns. 21 75

Causes of anaemia in 101 adult Melanesian patients admitted to Port Moresby General Hospital over a 3-year period with haemoglobin levels of 4.0 gms per 100 ml or less were studied retrospectively. Cases of anaemia due to acute haemmorrage were excluded. Iron deficiency was found in 80, haemolysis in 39, megloblastosis in 26 and anaemia of chronic diseases in 5 patients. Anaemia was secondary to multiple causes in 56 and to a single cause in 45 patients. In the group with multiple causes, a combination of iron deficiency and haemolysis was found in 28, iron deficiency and megaloblastosis in 18, iron deficiency, haemolysis and megaloblastosis in 6 and haemolysis and megaloblastosis in 5 patients. In the group with a single cause, iron deficiency was found in 34, anaemia of chronic diseases in 5, haemolysis in 4 and megaloblastosis in 2 patients. Hookworm infestation and malaria appeared to be the major underlying causes of anaemia in the majority of these patients. Three of 45 patients who had received blood transfusions shortly after admission to the hospital died, while there was only one death in the nontransfused group. It is concluded that: i) severe anaemia in Papua New Guinea is commonly secondary to multiple causes; ii) administration of iron and folic acid as well as treatment for malaria and hookworm is a responsible approach when these patients can not be investigated; and iii) blood transfusion does not appear to be necessary in this group of patients despite a very low haemoglobin level.
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PMID:Severe anaemia in Port Moresby. A review of 101 adult Melanesian patients with haemoglobin level of 4G/100 ml or less. 29 26

The incidence of infections was studied in 137 iron-deficient Somali nomads, 67 of whom were treated with placebo and 71 with iron. Seven episodes of infection occurred in the placebo group and 36 in the group treated with iron; these 36 episodes included activation of pre-existing malaria, brucellosis, and tuberculosis. This difference suggested that host defence against these infections was better during iron deficiency than during iron repletion. Iron deficiency among Somali nomads may be part of an ecological compromise, permitting optimum co-survival of host and infecting agent.
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PMID:The adverse effect of iron repletion on the course of certain infections. 36 Nov 62

The influence of malaria on HbA2 levels was investigated in two groups of children aged two to nine years from the Mano tribe of northern Liberia. One group, 174 children living in a town where there is malaria control, had a parasite rate of 6.5%, only a few having palpable spleens, but 282 children living in an area of intense malaria transmission had a parasite rate of 92%. All but one child in this group had enlarged spleens. However, the difference in proportions of elevated HbA2 values within the limits for beta-thalassaemia, 8% and 10.3% respectively, was not statistically significant (0.5 greater than P greater than 0.1). It was concluded that the influence of malaria on HbA2 levels is not significant and that this parameter is valid for detecting beta-thalassaemia trait in this population. Further, iron deficiency may be a more important factor than malaria to consider when assessing the results of HbA2 estimations.
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PMID:Malaria and haemoglobin A2 levels in northern Liberia. 47 9

Main objective of this study is to determine variables related to body build and blood status of three different ethnic groups inhabiting the same locality in Northern Nigeria. Of a stratified sample of the adult male population of a village community anthropometric measurements were taken. Body build of full grown men of each of the local Fulani, Hausa and Maguzawa tribes was recorded. This included height, weight, total and muscle arm-circumference, triceps and biceps skinfolds and the determination of the Quetelet and Ponderal indices. Fulani have the same stature as Hausa and Maguzawa but they have a more linear body type, less body mass, a lesser triceps skinfold, a lower Quetelet but a higher Ponderal index. The caloric intake of the local population is considered marginally sufficient, especially for Fulani, who may have a higher energy expenditure. Malaria and Schistosoma haematobium infections are highly endemic in the area and deteriorate the nutritional state. This is more evident in Hausa and Maguzawa than in Fulani, as is a degree of anaemia probably due to iron deficiency. In the Fulani the interaction of diet and infection appears to be more complex.
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PMID:Body bulid and nutritional status of three ethnic groups inhabiting the same locality in Northern Nigeria. 52 49

To study the relationships between malaria, anemia and malnutrition, 853 school-age children from a high malaria incidence area and an adjacent low incidence area were surveyed in September 1972. For the high incidence area the malaria slide positivity rate was 3.5%, spleen rate 7.6% and malaria (indirect fluorescent antibody) serology positivity 24.7%. Contrasted to this, no positive slides, only 3 palpable spleens and a 3.4% serology positivity rate were found for the low incidence area. Twenty-three percent of those studied were anemic, but the prevalence of anemia was the same in both the high and low incidence areas. However, a selected group of children with known history of recent or actual malaria was found to be more likely to have deficient hematocrit values than were children without such history. Hypochromia and microcytosis were prominent morphologic findings in children with anemia, suggesting a diagnosis of iron deficiency. Weights and heights for age were considerably below those of a U.S. reference population but similar to nationwide Salvadoran figures. In both the high and low incidence groups, 62% had arm circumference values below 90% of standard. The distribution of weight-to-height ratios was also similar for both groups. No difference in nutritional status between the two groups could be found.
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PMID:The prevalence and relationships of malaria, anemia, and malnutrition in a coastal area of El Salvador. 109 Nov 65

Porotic hyperostosis was observed in 34 percent of 539 crania excavated from sites in Arizona and New Mexico. Common causes of this cranial pathology in the Old World (thalassemia, sickel cell anemia, and malargia) do not explain its occurrence in the American Southwest, as malaria and hemoglobinopathies are not known to have existed in the New World prior to European contact. Iron deficiency anemia which may also be assoicated with porotic hyperostosis occurs on a mass level only with hookworm infestation or nutritionally-related iron deficiency. Since hookworm infestation is rare in the American southwest and has not been reported in prehistoric southwestern American Indians, the hypothesis of nutritional anemia was examined. In canyon bottom sites where the diet was heavily dependent on maize, which is low in iron and also contains an inhibitor of iron absorption, significantly more crania had porotic hyperostosis than in sage plain sites, where the diet included ample animal protein rich in easily absorbable iron (p less than .001). Furthermore, canyon bottom children, who were more susceptible to iron deficiency anemia, had a higher incidence of porotic hyperostosis lesions than adults (p less than .0001).
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PMID:The paleoepidemiology of porotic hyperostosis in the American Southwest: Radiological and ecological considerations. 110 84

Thalassemia has been considered a recessive, autosomic, hereditary disease, characterized by microcytic, hypochromic, hemolytic anemia, which occurs as the consequence of a defect in the synthesis of the globin chains, the two most frequent types are thalassemias a and b, which in their most severe forms are known as Hydrops Fetalis and Major Thalassemia. The patients who bear thalassemia are concentrated to those places on earth where malaria is endemic, including the Mediterranean region, Northern Africa, The Middle East, India, China and Southern Asia. The simple Heterozygotic states in both types of thalassemia are more benign and may go unnoticed or confused with iron deficiency.
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PMID:[Molecular aspects of alpha dn beta thalassemias]. 166 26

Iron and folate status were evaluated in a group of 106 Gambian children with malaria and variable degrees of anaemia. In children with malaria, normal or increased levels of red cell folate were found in 75 patients at presentation and in 15 patients 1-2 weeks after treatment with anti-malarials alone, despite the presence of giant metamyelocytes and megaloblasts in the bone marrow in some cases. Twenty-eight per cent of patients were found to have deficient bone marrow iron stores but malaria could not be directly implicated as the cause of this deficiency. Iron deficiency could also not be implicated as the sole cause of dyserythropoiesis in patients with malarial anaemia. Excess storage iron and the presence of ring sideroblasts were found in the bone marrow in some cases. It is concluded that the morphological changes including dyserythropoiesis, occasional megaloblasts, giant metamyelocytes and ring sideroblasts seen in the bone marrows of these children are manifestations of disturbed marrow function in malaria and are not related to haematinic deficiency. Because of the high rate of iron deficiency found in these patients it is recommended that Gambian children with severe anaemia should receive iron therapy after adequate treatment of malaria.
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PMID:Iron and folate status in Gambian children with malaria. 170 43

Anthropometric measurements were made and serum iron and ferritin levels determined in a group of Gambian children at the beginning of the rainy season and these findings were related to the malaria experience of the children during the following malaria transmission season. Susceptibility to malaria was not correlated with prior weight-for-age, height-for-age, weight-for-height or serum albumin, or with serum iron, serum iron binding capacity nor serum ferritin. Thus, our findings do not provide any support for the view that poor nutritional status, as assessed by anthropometric measurements, or iron deficiency protect against malaria infection. Children who developed a clinical attack of malaria accompanied by a high level of parasitaemia tended to have a higher mean weight-for-age at the beginning of the rainy season than did children who had a clinical attack accompanied by a low level of parasitaemia, but the difference between groups was not statistically significant. However, they had a significantly higher mean serum ferritin level (P less than 0.01).
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PMID:The relationship between anthropometric measurements and measurements of iron status and susceptibility to malaria in Gambian children. 178 Sep 80


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