Articles: black-people-genetics.
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Mar 2002
Polymorphisms in the tumor necrosis factor-alpha gene promoter may predispose to severe silicosis in black South African miners.
Susceptibility to silicosis is in part genetically determined. Polymorphisms in the promoter region of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, a cytokine with a central role in the pathophysiology of silicosis, have been associated with predisposition to several infectious and inflammatory diseases. Polymorphisms at positions -308, -238, and -376 in the TNF-alpha promoter region were compared in nine patients with severe silicosis with International Labour Office (ILO) grade 3 nodularity, 112 patients with less severe silicosis (ILO grades 1/1 to 2/2), and 120 black South African gold miners without silicosis (ILO grades 0/0) in an age-frequency-matched case- control study. ⋯ Subjects with severe silicosis were also significantly more likely to have the -308A allele (Fisher's exact p value = 0.034), but this result was confounded by ethnicity and was not significant within Basotho tribe members (Fisher's exact p value = 0.15). TNF-alpha promoter polymorphisms are associated with severe, but not less severe, silicosis in this population. A predominant effect on disease severity, rather than on disease frequency, appears to be a general feature of promoter polymorphism in diseases in which TNF-alpha has a critical role.
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A genome-wide scan of high-risk prostate cancer families in North America has demonstrated linkage of a particular marker to Chromosome Iq (HPC11. An even greater proportion of African-American families have shown linkage to HPC 1. Therefore, investigators at the National Human Genome Research Institute [NHGRI] in collaboration with Howard University and a predominantly African-American group of urologists established the African-American Hereditary Prostate Cancer (AAHPC) Study Network to confirm the suggested linkage of HPC in African Americans with a gene on Chromosome 1. ⋯ From March 1, 1998, to June 1, 1999, a total of 40 African-American families have been recruited who met the study criteria. Preliminary results suggest that racial/ethnicity grouping may affect the incidence and extent of linkage of prostate cancer to specific loci. The importance of these findings lays in the future treatment of genetic-based diseases.
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Mar 2001
Comparative StudyThe relationship between craniofacial morphology and obstructive sleep apnea in whites and in African-Americans.
Previous studies of craniofacial risk factors for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) have been based predominantly on cephalometry. However, differences in head form (measured by the cranial index [CI]) and facial form (measured by the facial index [FI]) are considered by anthropologists to provide a basis for structural variation in craniofacial anatomy. We assessed the association of head and facial form with the apnea hypopnea index (AHI) in 364 white individuals and 165 African-Americans. ⋯ CI and FI did not differ in OSA versus non-OSA groups of African-Americans. In subjects with OSA, the CI in whites was again greater and the FI smaller than those in African-Americans (p = 0.007 and p = 0.004, for CI and FI.) We conclude that brachycephaly is associated with an increased AHI in whites but not in African-Americans. The CI may useful in phenotyping and identifying population subsets with OSA.
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Preventive medicine · Jul 2000
Comparative StudyRisk of type 2 diabetes mellitus in young adults from a biracial community: the Bogalusa Heart Study.
Since type 2 diabetes has a strong familial component, characteristics of young adult offspring of type 2 diabetics were examined in a community sample to determine early abnormalities in black and white persons at risk. ⋯ The risk factors of young adults with parental type 2 diabetes or conditions of impaired fasting glucose and type 2 diabetes can be detected early. These observations have implications for early prevention and intervention, especially for blacks.