A prospective study of psychosocial consequences following predictive testing for inherited mutations in breast/ovarian and colon cancer susceptibility genes BRCA1, BRCA2, MLH1, and MSH2 was performed. Eighty-seven healthy women were tested for known family mutations and self-assessment scales were used to evaluate anxiety, depression and quality of life. Extensive pre- and post-test information was given.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA predictive testing program for Huntington disease has been available in Stockholm, Sweden since October 1990. Psychosocial assessments were performed throughout the testing program to evaluate the impact of the risk situation itself and the effect of predictive testing, and to identify those individuals who were most vulnerable to severe stress and anxiety reactions. All subjects underwent neurological, neuropsychological, and psychiatric examinations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA large family with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, showing a probable X-linked incomplete dominant inheritance, was studied by linkage analysis. Results, obtained by the use of X chromosome specific DNA probes of known regional location, suggest that the disease locus is linked to the DXYS1 locus (z = 2.59 at theta = 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsulin release and sensitivity were estimated from glucose and insulin curves obtained at a glucose infusion test performed on altogether 601 subjects belonging to 155 nuclear families. Ascertainment was through one of the parents, and 96 of the probands had diabetes with clinical onset after the age of 30 years, while 59 were healthy subjects. Three variables obtained by a computer model were analysed, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe significance of genetic factors for insulin release after glucose infusion was studied in 155 nuclear families of which 59 were control families and 96 had been ascertained through a parent with onset of diabetes after 30 years of age. Fasting insulin and glucose as well as three principal components of the insulin and glucose curves were submitted to path analysis and complex segregation analysis. The three principal components were considered to reflect the magnitude, the degree of response and the persistence of the curves.
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