Topics in genetics Flashcards
What populations are at high risk of which genetic diseases?
- African ancestry => sickle cell
- Ashkenazi Jews => tay-sachs, gaucher, canavan, etc
- Mediterranean => B-thalassemia
- SE Asian and Chinese => a-thalassemia, hemoglobin E
Why are certain populations more susceptible to certain genetic diseases?
- Heterozygote advantage
- Founder effect
- Genetic drift
- Inbreeding
Heterozygote advantage
- Heterozygotes are genetically more fit even when homozygotes have serious disease
- Sickle cell carriers are less likely to die of malaria during childhood
Founder effect
When a small group of individuals migrate and found a new isolated population that is (by chance) genetically different than their original population
Genetic drift
Change in frequency of a gene resulting by chance transmission at a higher or lower frequency than predicted
What are some key principles of newborn screening?
- there must be a recognizable latent or early phase where intervention is possible before bad health effects begin
- natural history of condition must be understood
- agreed policy on whom to treat as patients
How is newborn screening done?
- Physician/midwife must collect blood from heel stick onto filter paper and send to lab
- After 24 hrs of age (after feeding) but before discharge from nursery
What kind of disorders are screened for?
- organic acid disorders
- FA ox defects
- AA disoders
- hemaglobinopathies
- CF
- biotinidase deficiency
- galactosemia
- hypothyroidism
- congenital adrenal hyperplasia
- congenital hearing loss
- severe combined immunodeficiency
- cyanotic congenital heart disease
What are secondary targets of newborn screening?
Disorders that don’t merit screening for by will be diagnosed based on the testing for other disorders
What is the inheritance pattern and cause of neurofibromatosis-1?
- autosomal dominant (haploinsufficiency)
- 50% of cases from new mutations
incidence of NF-1
1/3500
Diagnostic criteria for NF-1
Need 2+ of:
- 6+ cafe-au-lait spots > 0.5 cm in kids or 1.5 cm in adults
- axillary or inguinal freckling
- 2+ NFs or 1 plexiform NF
- optic pathway tumor
- 2+ iris Lisch nodules
- distinctive osseous lesion
- 1st degree relative with NF-1
Neurofibromas
- Benign tumors commonly appearing around puberty
- Schwann cells, nerve fibers, fibroblasts
- cutaneous are soft, subcutaneous are firm
- not likely to become malignant
- dermal, internal, intraspinal (bad b/c of location), optic (bad b/c of location)
Plexiform NFs
- present at birth
- “wormy” with indistinct edges, extend deep into tissue => excision difficult
- 10% risk of lifetime malignant transformation
Iris Lisch Nodules
- Raised nodules on iris
- Clinically unimportant but useful diagnostic for NF-1