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|SubCategory=Hematology, Musculoskeletal/Rheumatology
|SubCategory=Hematology, Musculoskeletal/Rheumatology
|Prompt=A 7 year old boy presents to his pediatrician with fatigue and pallor.  The patient recently emigrated from Greece and his parents report that he has a long history of “sickliness”.  When he became very ill in the past he was taken to the hospital and given a blood transfusion.  Complete blood count shows a hemoglobin of 5.7 g/dL, white blood cell count of 12.7x10<sup>9</sup> /L. platelet count of 250 x 10<sup>9</sup> /L, and mean corpuscular volume of 70.  The child is unusually small and has a pronounced forehead.  A radiograph of the skull is shown below.  What is the most likely type of mutation that is responsible for this patient’s disease?
|Prompt=A 7 year old boy presents to his pediatrician with fatigue and pallor.  The patient recently emigrated from Greece and his parents report that he has a long history of “sickliness”.  When he became very ill in the past he was taken to the hospital and given a blood transfusion.  Complete blood count shows a hemoglobin of 5.7 g/dL, white blood cell count of 12.7x10<sup>9</sup> /L. platelet count of 250 x 10<sup>9</sup> /L, and mean corpuscular volume of 70.  The child is unusually small and has a pronounced forehead.  A radiograph of the skull is shown below.  What is the most likely type of mutation that is responsible for this patient’s disease?
[[File:WBR0150.jpg|center]]
[[File:WBR0150.jpg|center|400px]]
|Explanation=The patient in this vignette is suffering from beta-thalassemia major.  Beta thalassemia is most often caused by splice site mutations in the beta-globin gene and is prevalent in mediterannean populations. If both alleles of the beta globin gene have thalassemia mutations, beta thalassemia major is diagnosed. This is a severe microcytic, hypochromic anemia. Untreated, it causes anemia, splenomegaly, and severe bone deformities. It progresses to death before age 20.  A hallmark feature of the disease is the “buzz cut” or “hair on end” appearance of the skull on X-ray.  This increased spiky opacity is caused by bone marrow expansion in response to chronic anemia. (extramedullary hematopoeisis).  Treatment consists of periodic blood transfusion; splenectomy if splenomegaly is present, and treatment of transfusion-caused iron overload. Cure is possible by bone marrow transplantation.  
|Explanation=The patient in this vignette is suffering from beta-thalassemia major.  Beta thalassemia is most often caused by splice site mutations in the beta-globin gene and is prevalent in mediterannean populations. If both alleles of the beta globin gene have thalassemia mutations, beta thalassemia major is diagnosed. This is a severe microcytic, hypochromic anemia. Untreated, it causes anemia, splenomegaly, and severe bone deformities. It progresses to death before age 20.  A hallmark feature of the disease is the “buzz cut” or “hair on end” appearance of the skull on X-ray.  This increased spiky opacity is caused by bone marrow expansion in response to chronic anemia. (extramedullary hematopoeisis).  Treatment consists of periodic blood transfusion; splenectomy if splenomegaly is present, and treatment of transfusion-caused iron overload. Cure is possible by bone marrow transplantation.  



Revision as of 02:17, 31 August 2013

 
Author PageAuthor::William J Gibson
Exam Type ExamType::USMLE Step 1
Main Category MainCategory::Genetics
Sub Category SubCategory::Hematology, SubCategory::Musculoskeletal/Rheumatology
Prompt [[Prompt::A 7 year old boy presents to his pediatrician with fatigue and pallor. The patient recently emigrated from Greece and his parents report that he has a long history of “sickliness”. When he became very ill in the past he was taken to the hospital and given a blood transfusion. Complete blood count shows a hemoglobin of 5.7 g/dL, white blood cell count of 12.7x109 /L. platelet count of 250 x 109 /L, and mean corpuscular volume of 70. The child is unusually small and has a pronounced forehead. A radiograph of the skull is shown below. What is the most likely type of mutation that is responsible for this patient’s disease?
]]
Answer A AnswerA::Splice site mutation
Answer A Explanation AnswerAExp::'''Correct''' – Beta thalassemia is most often caused by splice site mutations in the beta globin gene.
Answer B AnswerB::Nonsense mutation
Answer B Explanation AnswerBExp::'''Incorrect''' – Beta thalassemia is most often caused by splice site mutations in the beta globin gene. An example of a disorder caused by germline nonsense mutations is Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy.
Answer C AnswerC::Missense mutation
Answer C Explanation AnswerCExp::'''Incorrect''' – Beta thalassemia is most often caused by splice site mutations in the beta globin gene. An example of a disorder caused by germline nonsense mutations is Becker Muscular Dystrophy.
Answer D AnswerD::Gene deletion
Answer D Explanation AnswerDExp::'''Incorrect''' – Beta thalassemia is most often caused by splice site mutations in the beta globin gene. An example of a disorder caused by deletions is Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy.
Answer E AnswerE::Gene silencing
Answer E Explanation AnswerEExp::'''Incorrect''' - Beta thalassemia is most often caused by splice site mutations in the beta globin gene. An example of a disorder caused by gene silencing is Prader-Wili syndrome.
Right Answer RightAnswer::A
Explanation [[Explanation::The patient in this vignette is suffering from beta-thalassemia major. Beta thalassemia is most often caused by splice site mutations in the beta-globin gene and is prevalent in mediterannean populations. If both alleles of the beta globin gene have thalassemia mutations, beta thalassemia major is diagnosed. This is a severe microcytic, hypochromic anemia. Untreated, it causes anemia, splenomegaly, and severe bone deformities. It progresses to death before age 20. A hallmark feature of the disease is the “buzz cut” or “hair on end” appearance of the skull on X-ray. This increased spiky opacity is caused by bone marrow expansion in response to chronic anemia. (extramedullary hematopoeisis). Treatment consists of periodic blood transfusion; splenectomy if splenomegaly is present, and treatment of transfusion-caused iron overload. Cure is possible by bone marrow transplantation.

Educational Objective: Beta Thalassemia is caused by splice site mutations in the beta-globin gene.
Educational Objective:
References: ]]

Approved Approved::Yes
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