elastin has been researched along with Birth-Weight* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for elastin and Birth-Weight
Article | Year |
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Molecular and clinical correlation study of Williams-Beuren syndrome: No evidence of molecular factors in the deletion region or imprinting affecting clinical outcome.
Williams-Beuren syndrome (WBS) results from a deletion of 7q11.23 in 90-95% of all clinically typical cases. Clinical manifestation can be variable and therefore, deletion size, inherited elastin (ELN) and LIM kinase 1 (LIMK1) alleles, gender, and parental origin of deletion have been investigated for associations with clinical outcome. In an analysis of 85 confirmed deletion cases, no statistically significant associations were found after Bonferroni's correction for multiple pairwise comparisons. Furthermore, the present data do not support presence of imprinted genes in the WBS common deletion despite a nonsignificant excess of maternal over paternal deletions. Maternal deletion cases were more likely to have a large head circumference in the present data. Also, pairwise comparisons between individual WBS clinical features have been conducted and revealed significant associations between (1) low birth weight and poor postnatal weight gain (<10th percentile at the time of examination) and (2) transient infantile hypercalcemia and a stellate iris pattern. The latter association could indicate a common underlying etiology. Topics: Alleles; Birth Weight; Chromosomes, Human, Pair 7; Elastin; Female; Gene Frequency; Genomic Imprinting; Genotype; Humans; Hypercalcemia; Infant, Newborn; Lim Kinases; Linkage Disequilibrium; Male; Phenotype; Polymorphism, Genetic; Protein Kinases; Sequence Deletion; Weight Gain; Williams Syndrome | 1999 |
Lung tissue elastin composition in newborn infants with the respiratory distress syndrome and other diseases.
Amino acid analysis of human fetal lung elastin was undertaken in 49 instances of live-born neonates, ranging from 380 g to full term, and in 3 abortuses of 12-14 wk gestation. The data suggest that formation of the cross-linking agents, desmosine and isodesmosine, occurs early, between 14 and 22 wk. The ratio of neutral to charged amino acids remains low until the 36th wk when it attains adult levels. The composition of elastin was independent of sex and duration of survival. In three neonatal pulmonary diseases (respiratory distress syndrome, atelectasis, and hemorrhage) ratios were significantly lower than those found in nondiseased lungs. This may be a reflection of immaturity or may be a predisposing factor in neonatal lung disease. The latter hypothesis is attractive and receives indirect support from the association of a more polar elastin with other diseases, including adult emphysema and atheromatous aortic change.Our finding of relatively high polarity in elastin from human fetal lung is consistent with previous observations in a variety of fetal organs of other species. Topics: Age Factors; Amino Acids; Birth Weight; Chemical Phenomena; Chemistry; Elastin; Gestational Age; Hemorrhage; Humans; Infant, Newborn; Infant, Newborn, Diseases; Lung; Pulmonary Atelectasis; Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Newborn; Sex Factors | 1974 |