Introduction: Hypothyroidism occurs in pregnant women at a rate of 0.3% to 3%. The deficiency of thyroid hormones during pregnancy can lead to an increased risk of pregnancy complications and poor health of the child, particularly affecting its psychomotor development due to the intensive growth of the nervous system during gestation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: The X and Y chromosomes are responsible for the determination and differentiation of the gonads, and their numerical and structural abnormalities may cause the abnormal development of secondary sex characteristics. The presence of abnormalities concerning X chromosome can also contribute to many genetically heterogeneous diseases associated with cognitive impairment and intellectual disability.
Purpose: This study shows the effect of aberrations of the maternal X chromosome on the abnormal development of the child.
Int J Immunopathol Pharmacol
March 2022
Background: Allergy is associated with the loss of tolerance of environmental antigens, combined with a pathological immune response. There were no studies up to date that would show whether the quality of semen decreases in people with allergic diseases.
Material And Methods: The research included men who reported to the Gynecological Outpatient Clinic due to reproductive difficulties, defined as the lack of pregnancy after one year of regular intercourse.
Background: The 3q duplication syndrome is a result of duplication of a large fragment of the long arm of chromosome 3, mainly 3q21-qter, and in most cases it is diagnosed only after birth. The phenotypic consequences resulting from genetic imbalance are an important source of information for genetic counselling, especially in prenatal diagnostics. However, in most cases it is impossible to define them precisely because the final clinical presentation is a result of an overlap, usually due to different sizes of deletions and/or duplications not only chromosome 3 but also of translocation partner chromosome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Balanced reciprocal chromosomal translocations (RCTs) are the ones of the most common structural aberrations in the population, with an incidence of 1:625. RCT carriers usually do not demonstrate changes in phenotype, except when the translocation results in gene interruption. However, these people are at risk of production of unbalanced gametes during meiosis, as a result of various forms of chromosome segregation.
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