The Rhesus (Rh) blood group is the most polymorphic human blood group and it is clinically significant in transfusion medicine. Especially, D antigen is the most important and highly immunogenic antigen. Due to anti-D, it is the cause of the hemolytic disease of the newborn and transfusion reaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoutheast Asian J Trop Med Public Health
December 2001
Venous thrombosis is a multicausal disease, more than one genetic risk factor may cooperate to effect thrombotic risk. Factor V Leiden is found to be an important hereditary risk factor for venous thromboembolism. Analogous to factor V Leiden, a point mutation at amino acid positions Arg336 and Arg562 in factor VIII may predispose patients to thrombosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAsian Pac J Allergy Immunol
June 2000
The molecular defect underlying activated protein C resistance (APC-R) is caused by a G to A point mutation in the codon for arginine 506 in the factor V gene (factor V Leiden) which is a major risk factor for venous thrombosis, especially in Caucasian populations. This study is an analysis of the Thai population to determine the prevalence of the factor V Leiden mutation. Twenty-seven patients with apparent venous thrombosis were divided into two groups according to APC-R test.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Immunogenet
December 1999
The distribution of HLA-DRB1 alleles and DQB1 alleles in 100 Thai patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) was analysed using the polymerase chain reaction with sequence-specific primer (PCR-SSP) method, and the association between the disease and the presence of certain HLA class II alleles was investigated. The frequencies of HLA-DRB1*1502 and DRB1*09012 were increased while those of DRB1*0404, DRB1*0803 and DRB1*1106 were decreased. On the other hand, the incidence of HLA-DQB1 alleles was similar to that in the normal population.
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