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Beta Thalassemia by Sylvester

Definition: Thalassemia is inherited


disorders characterized reduced or absent amounts of hemoglobin, the oxygen-carrying protein inside the red blood cells.

Two Basic Groups of Thalassemia Disorder


Alpha Thalassemia

Beta Thalassemia: A person with this disorder has two mutated genes

There are 3 types of Beta Thalassemia


Thalassemia Minor

Thalassemia Intermediate. Thalassemia Major or Cooley's Anemia

Thalassemias
In the case of beta thalassemias, in contrast to alpha -thalassemias, the most frequently encountered molecular abnormalities are point mutations and short insertions or deletions limited to a few nucleotides

Two situations have clearly to be distinguished: In beta + thalassemias, the mutated gene encodes for a small amount of normal mRNA and, thus, a low amount of

chain is still synthesized. The quantity of globin chain, which is made, varies largely from one molecular defect to another, this chain may be structurally normal or abnormal In beta 0 thalassemias , the gene is unable to encode for any functional mRNA and therefore there is no beta chain synthesize

Beta Thalasemia
It is caused by a change in the gene for the beta globin component of hemoglobin It can cause variable anemia that can range from moderate to severe. Beta thalassemia trait is seen most commonly in people with the following ancestry: Mediterranean (including North African, and particularly Italian and Greek), Middle Eastern, Indian, African, Chinese, and Southeast Asian (including Vietnamese, Laotian, Thai, Singaporean, Filipino, Cambodian, Malaysian, Burmese, and Indonesian

Symptoms of Beta Thalassemia


It is characterize by severe anemia that can begin months after birth Paleness Delays in growth and development Bone marrow expansion. Untreated Beta Thalassemia major can lead to child death due to heart failure.

Alpha and Beta Thalassemias


The thalassemias are, therefore, considered quantitative hemoglobin diseases. Because all types of thalassemia are caused by changes in either the alpha- or beta-globin gene. These changes cause little or no globin to be produced.

Treatment of Beta Thalassemia


Regular blood transfusion helps prevent severe anemia and allows for more normal growth and development

There are various medications that target the production of red blood cells (i.e. erythropoeitin)

References
First Known Heart Attack Associated With Beta- thalassemia Major Reported." Heart Disease Weekly February 22, 2004: 10. Bowden, Vicky R., Susan B. Dickey, and Cindy Smith Greenberg. Children and Their Families: The continuum of care . Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Company, 1998. "Thalassemias." In Principles and Practice of Medical Genetics , Volume 2, edited by Alan E.H. Emery, MD, PhD, and David L. Rimoin, MD, PhD. New York: Churchill Livingstone, 1983. Thompson, M.W., R. R. McInnus, and H. F. Willard. Thompson and Thompson Genetics in Medicine , Fifth Edition. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Company, 1991. Olivieri, N. F. "The Beta Thalassemias." The New England Journal of Medicine 341 (1999): 99-109.

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