congenital and genetic disorders Flashcards

1
Q

what are congenital abnormalities?

A

-BIRTH defects —>
result from PROBS in DEVELOPMENT in EMBRYO
(any non-genetic defect at birth!)

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2
Q

what is period of vulnerability?

A

-time in GESTATION where embryo is MOST sensitive to development ERRORS

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3
Q

time period of vulnerability is?

A

busy and sensitive; organogenesis (organs begin to form)

-15 to 60 days approx post conception

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4
Q

critical period is?

A

the time period for each organ system during development where they are particularly sensitive and any interruption in process may result in baby being born with congenital abnormality

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5
Q

CNS critical period?

A

2-4.5 weeks

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6
Q

CVS critical period?

A

2.5-5.5 weeks

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7
Q

limbs critical period?

A

3.5-7weeks

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8
Q

eyes critical period?

A

3.5-7.5 weeks

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9
Q

external genitalia period?

A

6.5 to 10 weeks

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10
Q

what is a teratogen?

A

any environmental factor causing congenital abnormality

-includes maternal environment AND environment surrounding mother

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11
Q

examples of teratogens?

A

example: radiation (affects cell function)
example: drugs/ chemicals (can cross placenta)- alcohol, thalidomide effect
example: microbes (pathogens/toxins)- screened early in pregnancy like rubella virus
example: cig smoke

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12
Q

are congenital abnormalities always due to a teratogen?

A

no, can be a result of a lack of something (like malnutrition)

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13
Q

what are the 4 genetic abnormalities

A
  1. monogenic
  2. polygenic/complex trait (multifactoral)
  3. mitochondrial gene disorders
  4. chromosomal defects
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14
Q

what is a monogenic abnormality?

A
  • SINGLE gene
  • caused by defective or mutant allele
  • primarily affect CHILDREN
  • pattern of inheritance depend on whether phenotype is DOMINANT or RECESSIVE and whether AUTOSOMAL or SEX chr
  • –> leads to formation of ABNORMAL protein, or decreased protein production of gene product
  • –> results in: defective enzyme or decreased amts of enzyme, defects in receptor proteins, alterations in non-enzyme proteins, mutations resulting in unsual rxns to drugs
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15
Q

3 types of monogenic abnormalities?

A

a) autosomal dominant
b) autosomal recessive
c) x-linked disorders or “sex linked”

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16
Q

what is autosomal dominant disorder?

A
  • SINGLE mutant allele form affected parent transmitted to offspring regardless of sex
  • autosomal= non-sex
  • dominant= if defective allele is transmitted to offspring it will cause an abnormality
  • affected parent has 50% chance of transmitting it
17
Q

what is autosomal recessive disorder?

A
  • BOTH alleles affected
  • both parents could be unaffected but carriers
  • affects sexes equally
  • if one parent fully affected, all children carriers
  • if both parents carriers: 25% child affected, 25% unaffected, 50% carriers
18
Q

X-linked disorders or “sex linked”?

A
  • most sex chromosome defects are on X (female) chromosome)—> males most affected because females are homogametic and have 2 X, male have one (heterogametic)
  • unaffected mother carries 1 normal one mutant: 50% chance to sons, 50% chance daughters carrying
  • affected father: transmits defective to daughters, does not transmit to son
19
Q

polygenic/complex trait (multifactoral inheritance disorder)?

A
  • caused by multiple genes (2 or more) and in many cases environmental factors (like viral infection)
  • expressed during FETAL life and present at birth, or may be expressed LATER in life
  • environmental factors play greater role in disorders that develop LATER
  • multifactoral= someone could have predisposition but not get it b/c of good lifestyle
20
Q

mitochondrial gene disorders?

A
  • DNA not only in nucleus, some in MITOCHONDRIA
  • 37 mitochondrial genes
  • involved in production of ATP
  • code for enzymes involved in electron transport chain (resp chain) in mitochondria
  • only transmitted by MOTHER (maternal inheritance)
  • b/c sperm tail falls off with mitochondrial genes in it
  • most MITOCHONDRIAL defects show in NEUROMUSCULAR defects
  • –> neurons and muscle cells have high requirement for OXIDATIVE metabolism (more ATP!)
21
Q

chromosomal defects?

A

46 chromosomes, 23 pairs

-defect in NUMBER or STRUCTURE of chromosomes

22
Q

what is a karytotype?

A

-TEST to identify and evaluate size, shape, number of chromosomes in sample of body cells

23
Q

aneuploidy=

A

problem related to NUMBER of chromosomes

24
Q

what is a numerical abnormality (chromosomal)?

A

aneuploidy, problem related to number of chromosomes (more or less than normal)
monosomy= one chromosome pair is LACKING
trisomy= EXTRA chromosome (downsyndrome is trisomy 21)

25
Q

turners syndrome?

A

-female has missing sex chromosome
-1 in 2500 births, gametes XO not XY
can live with turners

26
Q

klinefelters syndrome?

A

-male has extra X chromosome

XXY, 47 chromosomes

27
Q

what is a structural defect (chromosomal)?

A
  • under certain circumstances SECTION of CHROMOSOME can break OFF, detached segment can do 1 of 3 things:
    1. deletion
    2. inversion
    3. translocation
28
Q

what is deletion (structural)

A

LOST a piece of chromosome (one in pair)

  • detached segment does NOT reattach
  • LOSS of genetic material
29
Q

what is inversion (structural)

A
-piece of chromosome INVERTS 
(top to bottom) 
-REVERSES its orientation and reattaches to original 
-two breaks in a SINGLE chromosome 
-PERICENTRIC= around the centromere
-PARACENTRIC= away from centromere
30
Q

what is translocation (structural)

A
  • piece TRANSFERRED over to another chromosome
  • segment BREAKS off and attaches to a non-homologous chromosome
  • balanced translocation, robertsonian, isochromosomal