Displaying publications 1 - 20 of 123 in total

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  1. VELLA F
    Med J Malaya, 1959 Dec;14:116-21.
    PMID: 13841623
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/etiology*
  2. Lie-Injo LE
    Blood, 1962 Nov;20:581-90.
    PMID: 13930509
    Five cases of severe hydrops and erythroblastosis fetalis in association with a large amount of Hb “Bart’s,” all of Chinese origin, are described. The following characteristic clinical and hematologic symptoms were found. There were generalized hydrops, ascites and gross enlargement of the liver. The spleen, however, was not ahvays enlarged. The placenta was large and friable. Severe erythroblastosis of the blood was always found, with reticulocytosis, many target cells and thin cells. The MCV of the red cells was very high. The cells showed an interesting sickling phenomenon. No evidence of isoimmunization was found. In eight parents examined, no abnormal hemoglobin was detected, and alkali-resistant hemoglobin and hemoglobin A2 were not found to be increased. Their blood showed microcytosis of the red cells cxcept in one father and one mother. In this mother, however, the blood was examimied after a blood transfusion. It is thought probable that these were cases of homozygous alpha-chain thalassemia.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia*
  3. Ismail JB
    Med J Malaysia, 1992 Jun;47(2):98-102.
    PMID: 1494340
    One thousand consecutive Brunei Darussalam patients referred with low Hb, and/or low MCV and MCH (Hb < 12.5g/dl, MCV < 76fl, MCH < 27pg) were studied in the laboratory for underlying haemoglobinopathies. 30.0% of such patients were proved to have either beta-thalassaemia trait, beta-thalassaemia major, Hb AE, Hb EE, Hb E beta-thalassaemia or Hb H disease. In some, the haemoglobin abnormality was not identified precisely. Alpha-thalassaemia was suspected in an additional 4.3% of cases but confirmation study by globin-chain synthesis was not available. Beta-thalassaemia trait which was the predominant disorder was equally distributed among the three major race groups of Brunei Darussalam. Hb E was found exclusive among the Malay population. Hb H disease appeared as more common among the Chinese or the Malays (p > 0.05). This study reveals that thalassaemia and haemoglobinopathies are prevalent in Brunei Darussalam.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/genetics; beta-Thalassemia/epidemiology
  4. Laosombat V, Fucharoen SP, Panich V, Fucharoen G, Wongchanchailert M, Sriroongrueng W, et al.
    Am J Hematol, 1992 Nov;41(3):194-8.
    PMID: 1415194
    A total of 103 beta thalassemia genes from 78 children (45 with Hb E/beta thalassemia, 8 with beta thalassemia heterozygotes, and 25 with homozygous beta thalassemia) were analyzed using dot-blot hybridization of the polymerase chain reaction-amplified DNA and direct DNA sequencing. Nine mutations were characterized in 98/103 (95%) of beta thalassemia alleles, of which six (a 4 bp deletion in codons 41-42, a G-C transition at position 5 of IVS-1, A-G transition at codon 19, an A-T transition at codon 17, an A-G transition at position -28 upstream of the beta globin gene, a G-T transition at position 1 of IVS-1), accounted for 92%. The spectrum of beta thalassemia mutations in Chinese Thai is similar to that reported among the Chinese from other parts of the world. The distribution of beta thalassemia mutations in Muslim Thai is similar to that reported among Malaysians. The most common beta thalassemia mutation in Thai and Chinese Thai patients is the frameshift mutation at codons 41-42, in comparison with the Muslim Thai in whom the G-C transition at position 5 of the IVS-1 mutation predominates. The heterogeneity of molecular defects causing beta thalassemia should aid in the planning of a prenatal diagnosis program for beta thalassemia in the South of Thailand.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/diagnosis; beta-Thalassemia/genetics*; beta-Thalassemia/epidemiology*
  5. Tan KK, Lee WS, Liaw LC, Oh A
    Singapore Med J, 1993 Apr;34(2):109-11.
    PMID: 8266145
    Two hundred and eleven blood transfusions were administered to 26 multi-transfused thalassemic children (aged 9 months-13 years) over a 6-month period. Eighteen children were receiving buffy coat-poor packed red cells (PRC) prepared by centrifuge while 8 children received filtered blood through a leucocyte-filter (Sepacell R-500A). Transfusion reactions occurred in 8.5% (n = 18) of transfusions and in 42.3% (n = 11) of patients. 11.9% (n = 16) and 2.6% (n = 2) of reactions occurred in 50% (n = 9) and 25% (n = 2) of patients receiving buffy coat-poor PRC and filtered blood respectively. Transfusion reactions in toto were significantly reduced in the group receiving filtered blood (p < 0.05). However, febrile reaction alone was not significantly reduced (p > 0.1). The median onset and duration of reaction were 2 hours (range 10 minutes-18 hours) and 4 hours (range 1/2-24 hours) respectively. 72.2% (n = 13) of the reactions occurred occurred during transfusion. 88.8% (n = 16) of the reactions caused only one symptom. 19.2% (n = 5) of all patients had recurrent reactions, all of them receiving buffy coat-poor PRC. The commonest clinical manifestation was fever (n = 7), followed by urticaria (n = 5) and petechial rash (n = 2). The outcome was good, with no patient experiencing symptoms exceeding 24 hours. Only 0.9% (n = 2) of the transfusions were discontinued.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/therapy*
  6. George E, George R, Ariffin WA, Mokhtar AB, Azman ZA, Sivagengei K
    Med J Malaysia, 1993 Sep;48(3):325-9.
    PMID: 8183146
    The study concerned the identification of the beta-thalassaemia mutations that were present in 24 patients with beta-thalassaemia major who were transfusion dependent. The application of a modified polymerase chain reaction, the amplification refractory system (ARMS) was found to be an effective and rapid method for the identification of the beta-thalassaemia mutations. Six different mutations were detected. Seventy five percent of the patients were Chinese-Malaysians and showed the commonly occurring anomalies: 1. frameshift codon 41 and 42 (-TCTT); 2. the C to T substitution at position 654 of intron 2 (IVS-2); 3. the mutation at position -28(A to G); and the nonsense mutation A to T at codon 17. In the Malays, the common mutations seen were: 1. the G to C mutation at position 5 of IVS-1; 2. the G to T mutation at position 1 of intron 1 (IVS-1); and the A to T at codon 17. The delineation of the specific mutations present will enable effective prenatal diagnosis for beta-thalassaemia to be instituted.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/diagnosis; beta-Thalassemia/genetics*
  7. Hoe TS, Deng CT, Khuzaiah R
    PMID: 8160075
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/complications*
  8. Chandran R, Ainoon O, Anson I, Anne J, Cheong SK
    Med J Malaysia, 1993 Sep;48(3):341-4.
    PMID: 8183149
    DNA analysis for the diagnosis of beta-thalassaemia is a relatively new technique in Malaysia. This, combined with chorionic villus sampling, has enabled us to offer prenatal diagnosis in the first trimester for this common condition. To the best of our knowledge, this has not hitherto been reported in Malaysia.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/diagnosis*
  9. Tan JA, Tay SH, Kham KY, Wong HB
    Jpn. J. Hum. Genet., 1993 Sep;38(3):315-8.
    PMID: 7903173 DOI: 10.1007/BF01874141
    The distribution of restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) at the BamH1 site of the beta-globin gene was investigated in the Chinese, Indian, and Malay race in Singapore. The sample comprised of 183 normal individuals and 35 beta-thalassemia carriers in which 13 were couples with at least one beta-major child. The results from this study indicate that BamH1 polymorphism will be informative in 22% of pregnancies at risk for beta-thalassemia major in Chinese, 19% in Malays and 7% in Indians. In prenatal diagnosis using BamH1 polymorphism for one beta-major affected family, the fetus was diagnosed to be normal or beta-carrier. The validity of BamH1 polymorphism in the exclusion of beta-thalassemia major was subsequently confirmed at birth by globin chain biosynthesis.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/diagnosis*; beta-Thalassemia/ethnology; beta-Thalassemia/genetics
  10. George E, Wong HB
    Singapore Med J, 1993 Dec;34(6):500-3.
    PMID: 8153710
    Patients with the Hb beta + [IVS 1-5 (G-->C)] clinically presented as beta-thalassaemia intermedia and remained asymptomatic in the absence of blood transfusions. With or without blood transfusions the patients were short and had moderate to marked thalassaemia facies. Children who received blood transfusions showed progressive iron loading with age. The serum ferritin and serum alanine transaminase levels were significantly raised in the patients who were given blood transfusions. In the presence of blood transfusions, and absence of adequate iron chelation therapy, splenectomy became an inevitable event at some stage of the disease because of increasing transfusing requirements.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/blood; beta-Thalassemia/drug therapy; beta-Thalassemia/genetics*; beta-Thalassemia/surgery; beta-Thalassemia/therapy*
  11. George E
    Ann Acad Med Singap, 1994 Jan;23(1):89-93.
    PMID: 7514384
    The clinical severity of the mutations causing beta-thalassaemia in West Malaysia is presented. Thalassaemia clinical scores (Thal CS), a scoring system, has been formulated to predict clinical severity. It is the type of beta-thalassaemia mutation present that decides on the clinical phenotype. The most severe beta-thalassaemia mutation is assigned a score of 4. A score of 8 indicates a severe thalassaemia phenotype. Alpha-thalassaemia, increased synthesis of Hb F, and glucose-6-phosphate deficiency may ameliorate the clinical condition at phenotype level, and the co-inheritance of hereditary ovalocytosis aggravates it.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/diagnosis*; beta-Thalassemia/genetics*
  12. George E, Wong HB, George R, Ariffin WA
    Singapore Med J, 1994 Feb;35(1):62-4.
    PMID: 8009283
    Patients on a moderate red cell transfusion programme have iron overload where the concentrations of the serum ferritin were inappropriate to increases in the transfusion load as a result of limitations of apoferritin synthesis and conversion of ferritin into haemosiderin. This study confirms the limitations for the use of estimations of the serum ferritin to evaluate the iron status in patients with expected high overload as would be seen in patients on many years of maintenance red cell transfusions in the absence of iron chelation therapy. Poor compliance, inadequate dosage of Desferal (deferoxamine), and the late initiation of iron chelation therapy were factors that were considered in the patients with failure of response to iron chelation.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/blood*; beta-Thalassemia/genetics; beta-Thalassemia/surgery
  13. Lee KF
    Med J Malaysia, 1995 Mar;50(1):110-3.
    PMID: 7752964
    Spontaneous intracranial haemorrhage is one of the cerebrovascular complications in beta-thalassaemia major patients. This is a report of 2 cases of fatal intracranial haemorrhage. Their ages were 12 and 7 years respectively, and they had been receiving regular blood transfusion for the past 3 and 2 years respectively. They developed acute onset of headache, loss of consciousness and convulsions at 5 and 2 days respectively after their last blood transfusion. C-T scan of the brain showed massive intracranial haemorrhage with extension into the ventricles. The spontaneous intracranial haemorrhages in these two cases was probably multi-factorial in origin. The predisposing factors included recent blood transfusion, prolonged prothrombin time and partial thromboplastin time as well as reduced platelet count.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/complications*
  14. Shukri A, Green S, Bradley DA
    Appl Radiat Isot, 1995 6 1;46(6-7):625.
    PMID: 7633384
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/therapy
  15. George E
    PMID: 8629111
    Beta-thalassemia in West Malaysia is caused by 14 molecular defects with differing clinical severity. In Chinese patients from West Malaysia, the main beta-thalassemia mutations seen were (a) a 4 base pair-TCTT deletion in codon 41-42 [frameshift mutation (FSC 41-42)]; (b) a C to T substitution at the second intervening sequence (IVS2-654); (c) an A to G substitution in the TATA box [-28 (A to G)], and (d) an A to T substitution in codon 17[17 A to T]. In the Malays, the main mutations seen were (a) a G to C in nucleotide 5 at the intervening sequence I [IVS1-5 (G to C)]; (b) G to T substitution in nucleotide I at the intervening sequence I [IVS1-1 (G to T)]; (c) a A to T substitution in codon 17 (17 A to T); (d) removal of C from codon 35 [codon 35 (-C)], and (e) a 4 base pairs-TCTT deletion in codon 41-42 [frameshift mutation (FSC 41-42)]. A scoring system (Tha1 CS) has been formulated to predict clinical severity. It is the type of beta-thalassemia mutation present that decides on the clinical phenotype. The most severe beta-thalassemia mutation is assigned a score of 4. A score of 8 indicates severe thalassemia.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/genetics*; beta-Thalassemia/physiopathology*
  16. Nopparatana C, Panich V, Saechan V, Sriroongrueng V, Nopparatana C, Rungjeadpha J, et al.
    PMID: 8629112
    Beta-thalassemia mutations in 282 alleles of 253 unrelated individuals originating from various provinces in the south of Thailand were characterized by dot blot hybridization, specific PCR-amplification and direct DNA sequencing. It was possible to characterize the mutations in 274 (97.2%) of alleles studied. Twelve different point mutations and two different large deletions of the beta-globin gene were identified. Seven common mutations, namely 4 bp deletion at codons 41/42. IVS1 position 5 (G-C), codon 19 (AAC-AGC), codon 17 (AAG-TAG), IVS1 position 1 (G-T), position -28 (A-G) and 3.5 kb deletion, accounted for about 91.5%. The mutations at mRNA cap site + 1 (A-C) and IVS1 position 1 (G-A), previously undescribed in Thailand, were found in 1 and 2 individuals, respectively. A novel mutation of 105 bp deletion at the 5' end of beta-globin gene was detected in a family originating from this area. The knowledge from this study should be useful for planning of genetic counseling and prenatal diagnosis programs for patients with beta-thalassemia in the south of Thailand.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/genetics*
  17. Hassan K
    PMID: 8629087
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/genetics; beta-Thalassemia/epidemiology*
  18. Thong MK, Law HY, Ng IS
    Ann Acad Med Singap, 1996 Jan;25(1):79-83.
    PMID: 8779552
    The beta-thalassaemia mutations in 20 Malaysian children with beta-thalassaemia major were characterised by using a multi-modal approach, consisting of a slot-blot hybridisation with selected allele-specific oligonucleotides (ASO), followed by reverse dot-blot assay (RDB), amplification refractory mutation system (ARMS) and genomic sequencing. This strategy yielded a 94.4% mutation detection rate. The 6 most common mutations were codons 41/42 (-TTCT), IVS II nt 654(C --> T), IVS I nt 5(G --> C), IVS I nt 1(G -->T), codon 35 (-C) and codon 19 (A --> G), which accounted for 83.3% of all mutations detected. A strategy of initial screening with the above 6 selected ASOs for slot-blot hybridisation followed by RDB assay for the less common Asian mutations would give a mutation identification of 91.7%. Another feasible approach would be to analyse alleles from a particular racial group, by a judicious selection of 4 ASOs common to that particular subpopulation and then supplement this with RDB assay. This could yield a 100% coverage for the Chinese subpopulation in Malaysia. With these strategies, a practical approach has been identified to overcome the pitfalls posed by the molecular heterogeneity of beta-thalassaemia to enable prenatal diagnosis and carrier screening to be carried out. Regional collaborative studies are to be encouraged as an indispensable tool in providing better health care services to our patients.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/diagnosis; beta-Thalassemia/ethnology; beta-Thalassemia/genetics*
  19. Abdullah WA, Jamaluddin NB, Kham SK, Tan JA
    PMID: 9031421
    The spectrum of beta-thalassemia mutations in Malays in Singapore and Kelantan (Northeast Malaysia) was studied. Allele specific priming was used to determine the mutations in beta-carriers at -28, Codon 17, IVSI #1, IVSI #5, Codon 41-42 and IVSII #654 along the beta-globin gene. The most common structural hemoglobin variant in Southeast Asia, Hb E, was detected by DNA amplification with restriction enzyme (Mnl1) analysis. Direct genomic sequencing was carried out to detect the beta-mutations uncharacterized by allele-specific priming. The most prevalent beta-mutations in Singaporean Malays were IVSI #5 (45.83%) followed by Hb E (20.83%), codon 15 (12.5%) and IVSI #1 and IVSII #654 at 4.17% each. In contrast, the distribution of the beta-mutations in Kelantan Malays differed, with Hb E as the most common mutation (39.29%) followed by IVSI #5 (17.86%), codon 41-42 (14.29%), codon 19 (10.71%) and codon 17 (3.57%). The beta-mutations in Kelantan Malays follow closely the distribution of beta-mutations in Thais and Malays of Southern Thailand and Malays of West Malaysia. The AAC-->AGC base substitution in codon 19 has been detected only in these populations. The spectrum of beta-mutations in the Singaporean Malays is more similar to those reported in Indonesia with the beta-mutation at codon 15 (TGG-->TAG) present in both populations. The characterization of beta-mutations in Singaporean and Kelantan Malays will facilitate the establishment of effective prenatal diagnosis programs for beta-thalassemia major in this ethnic group.
    Matched MeSH terms: beta-Thalassemia/ethnology; beta-Thalassemia/genetics*
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