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         Tay-sachs Disease:     more books (56)
  1. Tay-Sachs disease-causing mutations and neutral polymorphisms in the hex A gene by Rachel Myerowitz, 1997
  2. Cerebral sphingolipidoses: A symposium on Tay-Sachs' disease and allied disorders
  3. Tay-Sachs disease: January 1969 through August 1972 : 98 citations (Literature search / National Library of Medicine) by Estela Gonzalez Barry, 1972
  4. An anthropological analysis of Tay-Sachs disease: Genetic drift among the Ashkenazim Jews by Arlene Logioco Fraikor, 1973
  5. And therefore choose life: A CVS guide for programs on Tay-Sachs disease by Bonnie D Gordon, 1976
  6. Cerebral sphingolipidoses: A symposium on Tay-Sachs disease and allied disorders
  7. Tay Sachs Disease Carrier Screening in the Ashkenazi Jewish Population: A Needs Assessment and Review of Current Services by Hilary Burton, Sara Levene, et all 2009-03
  8. Tay-Sachs Disease (Advances in Genetics, Volume 44) by Michael M. Kaback Robert J. Desnick, 2001
  9. Kaback Tay-Sachs Disease - Screening and Prevention by MM KABACK, 1977-05-06
  10. Tay-Sachs Disease - A Medical Dictionary, Bibliography, and Annotated Research G by ICON Health Publications, 2004-01-01
  11. The National Tay Sachs and Allied Diseases Association by Paula Zeitlin, 1986
  12. The Troubled Dream of Genetic Medicine: Ethnicity and Innovation in Tay-Sachs, Cystic Fibrosis, and Sickle Cell Disease by Keith Wailoo, Stephen Pemberton, 2006-04-20
  13. Troubled Dream of Genetic Medicine Ethnicity & Innovation in Tay-Sachs, Cystic Fibrosis, & Sickle Cell Disease by KeithWailo&StephenPemberton, 2006
  14. Childhood diseases: An entry from Thomson Gale's <i>Gale Encyclopedia of Science, 3rd ed.</i> by Larry Blaser, 2004

41. Tay-Sachs Disease
taysachs disease Presentation is usually at six months of age when affected infants,who previously have appeared normal and passed their early milestones
http://www.sas-centre.org/genetic/genpages/lysstodistaysachsdisease.html
Tay-Sachs Disease
Presentation is usually at six months of age when affected infants, who previously have appeared normal and passed their early milestones, become lethargic, floppy and poor feeders. They show an abnormal accentuated startle response to sudden noises. There is usually a macular cherry-red spot. Motor development becomes progressively retarded and as the disease progresses blindness, spasticity and decerebrate rigidity occur. Feeding becomes increasingly difficult and death usually occurs by 3 years following pulmonary infection. Later onset forms of the disease with juvenile or adult presentation and sub-acute or chronic courses also occur. In these there may be survival into adolescence, or longer survival with normal intelligence but slowly progressive spinocerebellar degeneration. Enzyme Test: b -Hexosaminidase A is measured for diagnosis of this disease.
Back to Lysosomal Storage Disorders Index

42. Glossary Definition: Tay-Sachs Disease
taysachs disease. tay-sachs disease results in the deterioration ofthe nervous system, usually resulting in death before the patient
http://www.pbs.org/faithandreason/biogloss/tays-body.html
Tay-Sachs Disease
Tay-Sachs disease results in the deterioration of the nervous system, usually resulting in death before the patient reaches age 5. It is caused by the absence of an enzyme which breaks down lipids, resulting in a lethal accumulation in cells. There is no treatment, but potential parents can be identified as carriers for the disease with a blood test. Glossary Index To return to the previous topic, click on your browser's 'Back' button, or select from the topics list.

43. Tay-Sachs Disease
taysachs disease. Subject tay-sachs disease Title Tay-Sachs Author(s)Journal Book Vol Date 83/09 Page(s) Organization March
http://med-aapos.bu.edu/PediRef/tay-sachs.html
Tay-Sachs Disease
Subject: Tay-Sachs Disease Title: Tay-Sachs Author(s): Journal: Book: Vol: Date: 83/09 Page(s): Organization: March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation; Genetic Counseling Svcs. Address: 1275 Mamroneck Avenue City: White Plains State: NY Zip: 10605 Phone: (914) 428-71 00 or your local March of Dimes office Type: Fact Sheet Subject: Tay-Sachs Disease Title: Tay-Sachs Disease Author(s): Journal: Book: Vol.: Date: 1992 Pages: Organization: National Organization for Rare Disorders, Inc. Address: P.O. Box 8923;,IOO Route 37 City: New Fairfield State: CT Zip: 06812-1783 Phone:(203) 746-6518 Type: Fact Sheet
You can send E-Mail to the AAPOS Web Server directly from here. Please send comments and suggestions. You may also attach electronic files to e-mail. Please send us feedback
Last Modified by Rick Blocker on 3/10/95
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44. Short Description Of Cell Lines. Pathology: Tay-Sachs Disease *272800
Version 4.200205, Short description of cell lines. Pathology TaySachsdisease *272800 OMIM record. - By selecting the cell line
http://www.biotech.ist.unige.it/cldb/pat138.html
Version
Short description of cell lines.
Pathology: Tay-Sachs disease
OMIM record
By selecting the cell line name , you will receive the detailed description of the cell line
By selecting one of the terms between parentheses, you will receive the list of all relevant cell lines
You can search any term of the list by using the 'Find' utility of your browser
human, Caucasian
amnion GEIMM
human, Caucasian
...
By Beatrice...

45. InteliHealth: Tay-Sachs Disease
Health A to Z, Reviewed by the Faculty of Harvard Medical School taysachs disease Tay-Sachsdisease is an inherited disease caused by an abnormal gene.
http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/9339/10834.html
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Tay-Sachs Disease
  • What Is It?
  • 46. 1Up Health > Tay-Sachs Disease > Causes, Incidence, And Risk Factors Of Tay-Sach
    1Up Health Diseases Conditions taysachs disease Causes, Incidence, and RiskFactors. tay-sachs disease Causes, Incidence, and Risk Factors. Definition
    http://www.1uphealth.com/health/tay_sachs_disease_info.html
    1Up Health Tay-Sachs disease Alternative Medicine Clinical Trials ... Health Topics A-Z Search 1Up Health Tay-Sachs disease Information Tay-Sachs disease Causes, Incidence, and Risk Factors Definition : A familial disorder found predominantly in Ashkenazi Jewish families, which results in early death.
    Causes, Incidence, and Risk Factors
    Tay-Sachs disease is caused by a deficiency of hexosaminidase, an enzyme that is important in the metabolism of gangliosides (a type of chemical substance found in nerve tissue). These gangliosides, particularly ganglioside GM2, then accumulate in the brain, causing neurological deterioration. Tay-Sachs disease is inherited as a recessive gene, and 1 out of every 25 members of the Ashkenazi Jewish population carries the gene. The incidence is 1 out of 2,500 people in this population.
    Depending on the age of onset and clinical features, Tay-Sachs has been classified into infantile-, juvenile-, and adult-onset forms. The majority of people with Tay-Sachs, however, have infantile forms. Symptoms begin to appear at 3 to 6 months old. The disease unfortunately tends to progress rapidly, and the child usually dies by the age of 4 or 5 years.

    47. Center For Jewish Genetic Diseases - Mount Sinai School Of Medicine
    MSSM Home, Diseases taysachs disease. ay-Sachs disease infections.tay-sachs disease is an inherited metabolic disorder. The basic
    http://www.nfjgd.org/diseases/tay-sachs.shtml
    Diseases: Tay-Sachs Disease ay-Sachs disease is the most well known Jewish genetic disease, potentially affecting one in every 2,500 Ashkenazi Jewish newborns. Two forms of this disease occur in Ashkenazi Jews, the well known infantile-onset form and a lesser known, late-onset or adult form designated "chronic GM2-gangliosidosis". Infantile Tay-Sachs Disease
    This disease is characterized by the onset of severe mental and developmental retardation during the first four to eight months of life. An early sign of the disease is the cherry-red spot, an unusual abnormality in the retina of the eye observed only by use of an ophthalmoscope. The involvement of the central nervous system progresses rapidly and affected children become totally debilitated by two to five years of life. Affected children also develop seizures which are not controllable with anti-epileptic drugs. Death usually occurs by three to five years of life due to pneumonia or other infections. Tay-Sachs disease is an inherited metabolic disorder. The basic defect in affected children is the deficiency of an enzyme , Beta-hexosaminidase A. This enzyme normally breaks down a naturally occurring fatty substance called GM2-ganglioside. The enzyme deficiency leads to a toxic accumulation of GM2-ganglioside in the cells of the nervous system. The gene for hexosaminidase A has been isolated on

    48. NINDS Tay-Sachs Disease Information Page
    More about NINDS taysachs disease Information Page. Content for thispage. NINDS tay-sachs disease Information Page. Reviewed 12-05-2001.
    http://accessible.ninds.nih.gov/health_and_medical/disorders/taysachs_doc.htm
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    Table of Contents (click to jump to sections)
    What is Tay-Sachs Disease?

    Is there any treatment?

    What is the prognosis?

    What research is being done?
    ...
    Additional resources from MEDLINEplus

    What is Tay-Sachs Disease?
    Is there any treatment?

    49. Tay-Sachs Disease
    taysachs disease. Definition tay-sachs disease is a genetic disorder. A missingenzyme results in the accumulation of a fatty substance in the nervous system.
    http://www.chclibrary.org/micromed/00067340.html

    Main Search Index
    Definition Description Causes ... Resources
    Tay-Sachs disease
    Definition
    Tay-Sachs disease is a genetic disorder. A missing enzyme results in the accumulation of a fatty substance in the nervous system. This results in disability and death Description
    Gangliosides are a fatty substance necessary for the proper development of the brain and nerve cells (nervous system). Under normal conditions, gangliosides are continuously broken down, so that an appropriate balance is maintained. In Tay-Sachs disease, the enzyme necessary for removing excess gangliosides is missing. This allows gangliosides to accumulate throughout the brain, and is responsible for the disability associated with the disease. Tay-Sachs disease is particularly common among Jewish people of eastern European and Russian (Ashkenazi) origin. About one out of every 3,600 babies born to Ashkenazi Jewish couples will have the disease. Tay-Sachs is also more common among certain French-Canadian and Cajun French families.
    Tay-Sachs is a genetic disease, caused by a defective gene. Genes are located on chromosomes, and serve to direct specific development/processes within the body. Because it is a recessive disorder, only people who receive two defective genes (one from the mother and one from the father) will actually have the disease. People who have only one defective gene and one normal gene are called carriers. They carry the defective gene and thus the possibility of passing the gene and/or the disease on to their offspring.

    50. SupportPath.com: Tay-Sachs Disease
    SupportPath.com, taysachs disease. Professional Organizations of Interest None Listed. Clinical Trials Research on tay-sachs disease
    http://www.supportpath.com/sl_t/tay_sachs_disease.htm
    Tay-Sachs Disease
    A fatal inherited disorder in which an excess of a fatty substance accumulates in the brain's nerve cells leading to severe mental and physical deterioration. Most children with Tay-Sachs Disease die before age 5. Other topics of interest on SupportPath.com:
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    • UNITED STATES
      Late-Onset Tay-Sachs Foundation (LOTSF)
      Website:
      http://www.lotsf.org/
      Description: As of 05/31/2002, the website is being updated.
      Date Added: 05/31/2002
    • UNITED STATES
      The National Foundation for Jewish Genetic Diseases, Inc. (NFJGD)
      Website:
      http://www.nfjgd.org/
      Description: The NFJGD "is devoted to supporting research and informing both the public and the medical community about these, the nine most common Ashkenazi Jewish genetic diseases." View their

    51. Helpful Information About Tay Sachs
    taysachs disease What is Tay-Sachs? Infants with tay-sachs diseaseappear to develop normally for the first few months of life.
    http://www.lavacacounty.com/shawn/helpfulinfo.htm
    We found some very helpful links and information about this disease from
    Michaiah Rain Reed's Web Page
    ericreed@cruzio.com
    Michaiah also suffered from this disease and has since passed away.
    Please visit his site also. TAY-SACHS DISEASE
    What is Tay-Sachs? Tay-Sachs disease is a fatal genetic disorder in which harmful
    quantities of a fatty substance called ganglioside GM2 accumulate in the nerve cells in the
    brain. Infants with Tay-Sachs disease appear to develop normally for the first few months of
    life. Then, as nerve cells become distended with fatty material, a relentless deterioration of
    mental and physical abilities occurs. The child becomes blind, deaf and unable to swallow.
    Muscles begin to atrophy and paralysis sets in. A much rarer form of the disorder that
    occurs in patients in their twenties and early thirties is characterized by unsteadiness of gait and progressive neurological deterioration. Patients with Tay-Sachs have a "cherry-red" spot

    52. Tay-Sachs Disease
    Genetic Diseases. taysachs disease. tay-sachs disease is the centralnervous system. tay-sachs disease What is tay-sachs disease?
    http://jhhs.client.web-health.com/web-health/topics/GeneralHealth/generalhealths

    53. Tay-Sachs Disease. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
    taysachs disease. tay-sachs disease occurs primarily among Jews of Eastern Europeandescent but is also found in French Canadians whose roots are in the St.
    http://www.bartleby.com/65/ta/Tay-Sach.html
    Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Tay-Sachs disease (t KEY ) , rare hereditary disease caused by a genetic mutation that leaves the body unable to produce an

    54. Tay-Sachs Disease
    taysachs disease. What is tay-sachs disease? Infants with tay-sachs diseaseappear to develop normally for the first few months of life.
    http://www.clevelandclinic.org/health/health-info/docs/1300/1354.asp?index=6124

    55. NHS Direct Online Encyclopedia Tay-Sachs Disease
    taysachs disease. Introduction. tay-sachs disease is a recessive geneticdisorder (see 'Causes') that is common amongst Ashkenazi Jews.
    http://www.nhsdirect.nhs.uk/nhsdoheso/display.asp?sTopic=TaySachs

    56. NHS Direct Online Encyclopedia Tay-Sachs Disease
    taysachs disease. Introduction. tay-sachs disease is a recessive geneticdisorder (see causes) that is common amongst Ashkenazi Jews.
    http://www.nhsdirect.nhs.uk/nhsdoheso/print.asp?sTopic=TaySachs

    57. Alfigen/The Genetics Institute | Patient Information | Tay-Sachs Disease
    taysachs disease. What Is tay-sachs disease? Tay seizures. Death usuallyoccurs by the age of five. What Causes tay-sachs disease?
    http://www.alfigen.com/patient-taysachs.htm
    Tay-Sachs Disease
    What Is Tay-Sachs Disease?
    Tay-Sachs disease is a fatal genetic disorder that occurs more frequently in the Ashkenazi (Eastern European) Jewish population. Approximately 1 in 27 Ashkenazi Jewish individuals are carriers of this disease. A baby with Tay-Sachs disease appears normal at birth, but after six months of age, the child progressively develops mental retardation followed by paralysis, blindness, and seizures. Death usually occurs by the age of five.
    What Causes Tay-Sachs Disease?
    Tay-Sachs disease is caused by a deficiency of an enzyme called Hex-A. As a result of this deficiency, there is an accumulation of certain substances which damage the nervous system. Tay-Sachs is an autosomal recessive disorder, which means for an individual to be affected with the disease, he/she must inherit one copy of the abnormal (mutated) Tay-Sachs gene from each parent. Individuals with one copy of the abnormal gene and one copy of the normal gene are known as carriers. Carriers usually do not have any symptoms of the disorder.
    How Can Tay-Sachs Be Detected?

    58. Tay-Sachs Disease, DNA Analysis (510404)
    taysachs disease, DNA Analysis (510404). Screening for carriers of tay-sachs diseaseamong Ashkenazi Jews A comparison of DNA-based and enzyme-based tests.
    http://www.labcorp.com/datasets/labcorp/html/chapter/mono/mg002800.htm
    Tay-Sachs Disease, DNA Analysis (510404)
    CPT
    Related Information

    Genetics Appendix

    Synonyms Hexosaminidase A Deficiency
    Special Instructions A completed Tay-Sachs Disease Screening Questionnaire must accompany specimens. Call 800-345-4363 to request forms, or photocopy the form from the Genetics Appendix
    Specimen Whole blood, amniotic fluid, or chorionic villus sample (Submission of maternal blood is required for fetal testing.)
    Volume 7 mL whole blood or 10 mL amniotic fluid
    Minimum Volume 3 mL blood, 5 mL amniotic fluid
    Container Lavender-stopper (EDTA) tube; for fetal testing: sterile plastic conical tube or two confluent T25 flasks
    Storage Instructions Maintain specimen at room temperature.
    Causes for Rejection Frozen or hemolyzed specimen; quantity not sufficient for analysis Use Pre- and postnatal determination of Tay-Sachs disease carrier status; resolution of pseudodeficiency allele status Limitations Greater than 95% of the mutant alleles in persons with Ashkenazi Jewish heritage are detected. In persons with non-Ashkenazi heritage, approximately 52% of the mutant alleles are detected. Methodology Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and allele-specific oligonucleotide (ASO) and restriction enzyme analyses Reference Triggs-Raine BL, Feigenbaum AS, Natowicz M, et al. Screening for carriers of Tay-Sachs disease among Ashkenazi Jews: A comparison of DNA-based and enzyme-based tests.

    59. Florida State University College Of Medicine Digital Library
    taysachs disease Patient/Family Resources. Miscellaneous. tay-sachs diseaseAccess document. Miscellaneous tay-sachs disease Patient/Family Resources
    http://fsumed-dl.slis.ua.edu/patientinfo/metabolism/inborn/lysosomalstorage/sphi
    Patient/Family Resources by Topic: Metabolic Disorders
    Tay-Sachs Disease Patient/Family Resources
    Spanish Miscellaneous See also:

    60. Florida State University College Of Medicine Digital Library
    Clinical Resources by Topic Metabolic Disorders. taysachs diseaseClinical Resources. searches) Tay Sachs Disease List of documents.
    http://fsumed-dl.slis.ua.edu/clinical/metabolism/inborn/lysosomalstorage/sphingo
    Clinical Resources by Topic: Metabolic Disorders
    Tay-Sachs Disease Clinical Resources
    Pediatrics Pathology Genetics Clinical Guidelines ... Miscellaneous Resources See also:

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