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1.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 34(6): 759-62, Jun. 2001. tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-285849

ABSTRACT

In order to determine the contribution of alpha-thalassemia to microcytosis and hypochromia, 339 adult outpatients seen at Unicamp University Hospital (with the exception of the Clinical Hematology outpatient clinics), who showed normal hemoglobin (Hb) levels and reduced mean corpuscular volume and mean corpuscular hemoglobin, were analyzed. Ninety-eight were Blacks (28.9 percent) and 241 were Caucasians (71.1 percent). In all cases, Hb A2 and F levels were either normal or low. The most common deletional and nondeletional forms of alpha-thalassemia [-alpha3.7, -alpha4.2, --MED, -(alpha)20.5, alphaHphIalpha, alphaNcoIalpha, aaNcoI and alphaTSAUDI] were investigated by PCR and restriction enzyme analyses. A total of 169 individuals (49.9 percent) presented alpha-thalassemia: 145 (42.8 percent) were heterozygous for the -alpha3.7 deletion (-alpha3.7/aa) and 18 (5.3 percent) homozygous (-alpha3.7/-alpha3.7), 5 (1.5 percent) were heterozygous for the nondeletional form alphaHphIalpha (alphaHphIalpha/aa), and 1 (0.3 percent) was a --MED carrier (--MED/aa). Among the Blacks, 56 (57.1 percent) showed the -alpha3.7/aa genotype, whereas 12 (12.2 percent) were -alpha3.7/-alpha3.7 and 1 (1.0 percent) was an alphaHphIalpha carrier; among the Caucasians, 89 (36.9 percent) were -alpha3.7/aa, 6 (2.5 percent) had the -alpha3.7/-alpha3.7 genotype, 4 (1.7 percent) presented the nondeletional form (alphaHphIalpha/aa), and 1 (0.4 percent) was a --MED carrier. These results demonstrate that alpha-thalassemia, mainly through the -alpha3.7 deletion, is an important cause of microcytosis and hypochromia in individuals without anemia. These data are of clinical relevance since these hematological alterations are often interpreted as indicators of iron deficiency


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adolescent , Adult , alpha-Thalassemia/epidemiology , Erythrocyte Indices , Erythrocytes, Abnormal , Hemoglobins/analysis , alpha-Thalassemia/genetics , Brazil/epidemiology , Racial Groups , Ferritins/blood , Gene Deletion , Genotype , Prevalence
2.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 33(9): 1041-5, Sept. 2000.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-267979

ABSTRACT

Seven unrelated patients with hemoglobin (Hb) H disease and 27 individuals with alpha-chain structural alterations were studied to identify the alpha-globin gene mutations present in the population of Southeast Brazil. The -alpha3.7, --MED and -(alpha)20.5 deletions were investigated by PCR, whereas non-deletional alpha-thalassemia (alphaHphalpha, alphaNcoIalpha, aaNcoI, alphaIcalpha and alphaTSaudialpha) was screened with restriction enzymes and by nested PCR. Structural alterations were identified by direct DNA sequencing. Of the seven patients with Hb H disease, all of Italian descent, two had the -(alpha)20.5/-alpha3.7 genotype, one had the --MED/-alpha3.7 genotype, one had the --MED/alphaHphalpha genotype and three showed interaction of the -alpha3.7 deletion with an unusual, unidentified form of non-deletional alpha-thalassemia [-alpha3.7/(aa)T]. Among the 27 patients with structural alterations, 15 (of Italian descent) had Hb Hasharon (alpha47Asp->His) associated with the -alpha3.7 deletion, 4 (of Italian descent) were heterozygous for Hb J-Rovigo (alpha53Ala->Asp), 4 (3 Blacks and 1 Caucasian) were heterozygous for Hb Stanleyville-II (alpha78Asn->Lys) associated with the alpha+-thalassemia, 1 (Black) was heterozygous for Hb G-Pest (alpha74Asp->Asn), 1 (Caucasian) was heterozygous for Hb Kurosaki (alpha7Lys->Glu), 1 (Caucasian) was heterozygous for Hb Westmead (alpha122His->Gln), and 1 (Caucasian) was the carrier of a novel silent variant (Hb Campinas, alpha26Ala->Val). Most of the mutations found reflected the Mediterranean and African origins of the population. Hbs G-Pest and Kurosaki, very rare, and Hb Westmead, common in southern China, were initially described in individuals of ethnic origin differing from those of the carriers reported in the present study and are the first cases to be reported in the Brazilian population


Subject(s)
Humans , Child , Adolescent , Adult , alpha-Thalassemia/genetics , Globins/genetics , Mutation/genetics , alpha-Thalassemia/blood , Black People/genetics , Brazil/ethnology , White People/genetics , Genetic Testing , Polymerase Chain Reaction
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