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To print: Select File and then Print from your browser's menu Title: Genetic Defect Links Respiratory Disease and Congenital Heart Disease |
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"Genetic Defect Links Respiratory Disease and Congenital Heart Disease" CHAPEL HILL, NC -- June 14, 2007 -- The same genetic defect that causes a rare respiratory disease may also lead to some types of congenital heart disease, according to a study from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine. The link between the two diseases starts with cilia, the tiny, hair-like extensions that help the lungs clear of mucus and remove contaminants such as dust. The researchers first noticed the connection in children with a respiratory disease that affects cilia, primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD). A genetic mutation that impairs cilia movement causes the disease. A few children treated for PCD at UNC-Chapel Hill also had heterotaxy - an abnormal position of the heart and lungs associated with congenital heart disease. The research team wondered if PCD and heterotaxy were related because other types of cilia, called nodal cilia, are known to play a role in directing and organizing organs in developing embryo. Results of the new study indicate they are connected. The prevalence of heterotaxy and congenital heart defects was 200-fold higher in people with PCD than in the general population (one in 50 versus one in 10,000), the study found. The research appeared in the journal [Circulation. "This should spur physicians treating patients with congenital heart disease to be more vigilant about testing for and treating respiratory defects," said Dr. Michael R. Knowles, professor of pulmonary and critical care medicine and study senior author. "It is critical for families and physicians to recognize when congenital heart disease develops." |
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