Showing posts with label Genes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Genes. Show all posts

Saturday, July 11, 2009

The Miscarriage Test

Tampa (myFOXla.com) - It's such a sad reality some families must face, up to fifteen percent of pregnancies end in miscarriage. Most are due to problems with the DNA. The fetus can't develop normally because of defects in the genes. But when a woman has two or three miscarriages, it may be a clue something else is very wrong. Fox's Dr. Joette Giovinco has more on a simple test that may prevent repeats from happening.

Video:
http://www.myfoxla.com/dpp/health/The_Miscarriage_Test_20090710


Stories of Pregnancy & Birth over 44y
- Daily blog of hope & inspiration!
http://pregnancyover44y.blogspot.com/

5,100 Stories of Pregnancy & Birth over 44y
Daily blog of hope & inspiration!
http://pregnancyover44y.blogspot.com/

You Can Get Pregnant in Your 40's
Sharing articles, discussing options & suggestions
http://youcangetpregnant.blogspot.com/


Recent Keyword Searches: what to expect when you miscarry, dads miscarriage grief, miscarriage at 45, songs about miscarried babies, rememberance for miscarried baby

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Black Moms Face Triple the Risk of 'Preemie' Birth

U.S. study suggests genetics may be the reason why

FRIDAY, Feb. 9 (HealthDay News) -- Black women are three times more likely than white women to deliver their babies prematurely, a new study reveals.

Even worse, they are four times more likely to give birth extremely prematurely -- between 20 to 28 weeks gestation.

Genetics are the most likely reason for the phenomenon, the study's lead researcher said.

"It has been known that African-American women have an increased risk of preterm delivery," said Dr. Louis J. Muglia, director of the Center for Preterm Birth Research at Washington University School of Medicine, in St. Louis. "By this study we are trying to understand the foundation for that effect."

His team published its findings in the February issue of the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

The study tracked more than 700,000 births in Missouri from 1989 to 1997.

The researchers found that black women were three times more likely than their white counterparts to give birth at 20 to 34 weeks of pregnancy, rather than full-term (from 37 to 41 weeks).

The researchers controlled for socioeconomic factors, such as maternal age and economic status, Muglia said. Without adjusting for those factors, "the incidence of premature delivery would be 6.5-fold higher than in Caucasians," he noted.

In addition, 21.5 percent of the black women in the study had more than one premature delivery, compared to 9.2 percent of white women, the study found.

While there is no direct proof that genetic differences drive the disparity, the evidence does point in that direction, Muglia said. His group now is engaged in studies to try to prove that notion, he added.

"What we would like to do is identify in a broad way the factors that increase the incidence of premature delivery," Muglia said. "We want to identify families and examine them for polymorphisms," genetic differences associated with an increased incidence of premature childbirth.

Muglia and his colleagues have been working with 75 families in the St. Louis area for the past three years, and have started a study of similar families in Finland. "We don't have data yet," he said. "It would take many subjects to pick out those genes."

One working hypothesis is that there might be some hidden evolutionary benefit to preterm delivery. "For maternal survival, it might be better to deliver early," Muglia theorized.

To support that notion he cited sickle cell anemia, a genetic condition more common in blacks than whites. Carriers of two genes for the condition are at a handicap, but it has been found that the presence of a single sickle cell gene protects the carrier against malaria, Muglia noted.

"I'm not sure it really gives us definitive answers," said Dr. Diane Ashton, deputy medical director of the March of Dimes. "But it is one aspect that the March of Dimes is looking at to assess the differences in premature births."

There have been hints of a genetic factor, Ashton added, citing a study indicating that black women were more susceptible to early rupture of the membranes.

"There is some evidence here, but this is one study, and until we have some reproducible results I don't think we can base our final opinion on just one study," she said.

A 2006 report by the U.S. Institute of Medicine found that 12.5 percent of American babies were born at least three weeks ahead of their full-term delivery date. Care for those babies costs the nation $26 billion a year, with some requiring neonatal intensive care for two weeks.

Potential problems for premature babies include hearing loss, vision loss, cerebral palsy and seizures. Such problems are most common in babies born before 32 weeks of pregnancy.

Source: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/news/fullstory_45125.html

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Doctors Gain Insight Into Cause of Miscarriage

Researchers at the Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center have released a new study linking a cancer-related gene to the development of the placenta – the organ that regulates nutrient and oxygen exchange between a mother and her fetus during pregnancy, and perhaps in miscarriages.

"Our findings strongly suggest that the [cancer-related] gene is important in the development of the placenta, but they have other important implications, as well," says principal investigator Gustavo Leone, assistant professor of molecular virology, immunology and medical genetics and a researcher with Ohio State's Comprehensive Cancer Center and human cancer genetics program.

"People born with one mutated [cancer-related] gene have a higher risk of developing retinoblastoma. But are they also predisposed to miscarriage? Do [cancer-related] defects in the placenta cause learning or physical abnormalities? We are investigating these questions now."

Leone added, "Miscarriages have never been linked to a gene defect, but understanding the genetic basis of miscarriage would be a hugely important. It would be the first link between a gene mutation, placental function and development."

Source: MedicalNewsToday.com