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    News and Articles on G6PD



    Lab to find newborn's genetic defects  Sep 8, 2008
    NEW DELHI: A first of its kind laboratory to diagnose genetic disorders in newborns was recently started at Lok Nayak Hospital. Doctors say that nearly 400 different genetic defects in newborns can be diagnosed at this genetic lab with just a few drops of their blood. (India Times, India -- Health/Science)

    Malaria Control Goals Are Likely To Be Unachievable  Jul 24, 2008
    ScienceDaily (July 24, 2008) The Millennium Development Goal (MDG) to halt and begin to reverse the incidence of malaria globally is unlikely to be met, according to Wellcome Trust Principal Research Fellow Professor Bob Snow. The eight MDGs were established by the United Nations in 2000 with a view to tackling global poverty and health inequality. (Science Daily)

    QLT announces agreement to sell Aczone(R) to Allergan for approximately US$150 million  Jun 9, 2008
    The label required all patients to undergo G6PD screening and for those patients with this enzyme deficiency, regular blood monitoring was required during Aczone treatment. On March 17, 2008, the Company announced that the FDA removed the G6PD screening and monitoring requirements based on a Phase IV clinical trial in 56 safety-evaluable G6PD-deficient patients ... On June 6, 2008, Health Canada similarly removed the G6PD screening and monitoring requirements based on the Phase IV clinical... (Canada Newswire)

    Vitamin D Protects Cells From Stress That Can Lead To Cancer  May 14, 2008
    Lee found that vitamin D links with a gene known as G6PD, increasing its activity and the production of an enzyme called glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase ... The G6PD pathway is one of the mechanisms vitamin D uses, Lee said. (Science Daily)

    Blood Disease Protects Against Malaria In An Unexpected Way, Study Shows  Mar 20, 2008
    19, 2008) Children with an inherited blood disorder called alpha thalassemia make unusually small red blood cells that mostly cause a mild form of anemia. Now, researchers have discovered that this disorder has a benefit--it can protect children against one of the world's greatest killers, malaria, according to a new study. (Science Daily)

    Where people live the longest  Feb 20, 2008
    "One particular gene on the X chromosome seems to be faulty, failing to produce an enzyme known as G6PD. This can often have a negative impact on health, but in Ovodda it may well have had a positive effect.". The role G6PD may play in living longer is now being researched further, but the professor is convinced the genetic elixir of life lies with the families of Ovodda. (BBC News -- UK)

    The continuing of human evolution  Dec 17, 2007
    One gene, called G6PD, is emerging in African populations. Although it harms people by causing anaemia, it harms malaria more, and so confers a net benefit. (Hindu)

    At S$70, TMS test can save a baby  Aug 31, 2007
    Currently, only three tests those for a deficiency of G6PD enzyme which protects red blood cells, hypothyroidism and hearing impairment are mandatory for all babies. There is no consensus among the medical community on whether the TMS test should be compulsory, said Prof Satku. (Channel NewsAsia, Singapore)

    Too Many Vitamins? One Antioxidant Linked To Heart Disease, Study Shows  Aug 11, 2007
    Glutathione, one of the body's most powerful antioxidants, is regulated at multiple steps principally by the G6PD enzyme. To establish the connection between reduced glutathione and heart failure, Benjamin mated mutant alpha B-Crystallin mice that carried too much G6PD with mice that had far lower levels. (Science Daily)

    Too much anti-oxidant may lead to heart disease  Aug 10, 2007
    Glutathione, one of the body's most powerful antioxidants, is primarily regulated by an enzyme called G6PD. To establish the connection between reduced glutathione and heart failure, Benjamin mated mutant alpha B-Crystallin mice that carried too much G6PD with mice that had far lower levels. Their babies had normal levels of the antioxidant and didn't develop heart failure. (Deseret News)

    G6PD Deficiency Is Associated With Significant Protection Against Severe, Life-threatening Malaria  Mar 14, 2007
    A case-control study in two populations in Mali, West Africa has shown that glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency is associated with significant protection against severe, life-threatening malaria ... G6PD (A-) deficiency, an X chromosome trait prevalent in Africa, protected hemizygous male children but not heterozygous female children against progression of malaria into life-threatening complications ... G6PD deficiency is also known as "favism" after the Italian word for broad... (Science Daily)

    Black Women Have Excess Risk of Preterm Babies  Feb 12, 2007
    "This selective advantage phenomenon has been well described for diseases afflicting the black race, particularly sickle cell disease, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, and nitrous oxide synthase polymorphisms and their effects on the incidence of malaria.". The authors conducted a population-based cohort study to determine whether being black was an independent risk factor for extreme preterm birth and for the frequency of recurrent preterm births at similar gestational ages. (MedPage Today)

    Health Canada advises Canadians of health risks involved with ...  Nov 25, 2006
    have pre-existing inflammation or damage to the area of mucous membranes where the benzocaine is applied, have heart disease, suffer from malnutrition, or have certain metabolic conditions, specifically deficiencies in certain enzymes such as glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase or hemoglobin reductase Health Canada is issuing a Notice to Hospitals to remind health care professionals about this adverse reaction and recommending ways to minimize the risk. Consumers requiring more information... (DG News)

    Scale, Toll of Gene Birth Defects Vast, Study Finds  Jan 31, 2006
    They included congenital heart defects (1 million cases); neural tube defects, such as spina bifida (324,000 cases); the hemoglobin disorders thalassemia and sickle cell disease (308,000 cases); Down syndrome (217,000 cases); and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency (177,000 cases). "This is an extraordinary toll," Howson said. (LA Times,CA -- Intl)

    3.3m children worldwide die of birth defects, study says  Jan 31, 2006
    "The report found that five defects -- congenital heart defects, neural tube defects such as spina bifida, blood disorders such as sickle cell disease, Down syndrome, and a blood disease called G6PD deficiency -- account for 26 percent of serious genetic problems. The toll from these defects could be reduced through better prenatal care and early recognition when a fetus is likely to be born with a defect, the authors said.''Overall mortality and disability from birth defects could be reduced by... (Boston Globe)

    Report: 8 million born with defects yearly  Jan 31, 2006
    Additionally, populations from Africa, the Eastern Mediterranean and Southeast Asia are most at risk of the common inherited diseases thalassemia, sickle cell and the metabolic disease G6PD, regions less likely to offer genetic testing that reveal at-risk couples. RELATED CONTENT. (MSNBC -- Health)

    Birth Defects Affect More Than 8 Million Children Annually  Jan 31, 2006
    " More than 94 percent of serious birth defects and 95 percent of the deaths of these children occur in such countries. For the year 2001, five birth defects caused wholly or partly by genetics accounted for about 26 percent of the following birth defects: congenital heart problems; neural tube defects such as spina bifida; hemoglobin disorders, including sickle disease; Down syndrome; and a disorder called glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, or G6PD, the report found. Worldwide, the... (Forbes)




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