2 resultados para UNSTABLE PERIODIC-ORBITS

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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Myotonic dystrophy (DM), an autosomal dominant disorder mapping to human chromosome 19q13.3, is the most common neuromuscular disease in human adults.^ Following the identification of the mutation underlying the DM phenotype, an unstable (CTG)$\sb{n}$ trinucleotide repeat in the 3$\prime$ untranslated region (UTR) of a gene encoding a ser/thr protein kinase named DM protein kinase (DMPK), the study was targeted at two questions: (1) the identification of the disease-causing mechanism(s) of the unstable repeat, and at a more basic level, (2) the identification of the origin and the mechanism(s) involved in repeat instability. The first goal was to identify the pathophysiological mechanisms of the (CTG)$\sb{n}$ repeat.^ The normal repeat is transcribed but not translated; therefore, initial studies centered on the effect on RNA transcript levels. The vast majority of DM affecteds are heterozygous for the mutant expansion, so that the normal allele interferes with the analysis of the mutant allele. A quantitative allele-specific RT-PCR procedure was developed and applied to a spectrum of patient tissue samples and cell lines. Equal levels of unprocessed pre-mRNA were determined for the wild type (+) and disease (DM) alleles in skeletal muscle and cell lines of heterozygous DM patients, indicating that any nucleosome binding has no effect at the level of transcriptional initiation and transcription of the mutant DMPK locus. In contrast, processed mRNA levels from the DM allele were reduced relative to the + allele as the size of the expansion increased. The unstable repeat, therefore, impairs post-transcriptional processing of DM allele transcripts. This phenomenon has profound effects on overall DMPK locus steady-state transcript levels in cells missing a wild type allele and does not appear to be mediated by imprinting, decreased mRNA stability, generation of aberrant splice forms, or absence of polyadenylation of the mutant allele.^ In Caucasian DM subjects, the unstable repeat is in complete linkage disequlibrium with a single haplotype composed of nine alleles within and flanking DMPK over a physical distance of 30 kb. A detailed haplotype analysis of the DM region was conducted on a Nigerian (Yoruba) DM family, the only indigenous sub-Saharan DM case reported to date. Each affected member of this family had an expanded (CTG)$\sb{n}$ repeat in one of their DMPK alleles. However, unlike all other DM populations studied thus far, disassociation of the (CTG)$\sb{n}$ repeat expansion from other alleles of the putative predisposing haplotype was found. Thus, the expanded (CTG)$\sb{n}$ repeat in this family was the result of an independent mutational event. Consequently, the origin of DM is unlikely the result of a single mutational event, and the hypothesis that a single ancestral haplotype predisposes to repeat expansion is not compelling. (Abstract shortened by UMI.) ^

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The purpose of this thesis is to identify "best practice" recommendations for successful implementation of the EPSDT outreach program at Memorial Health System's Hospital for Children in Colorado Springs through a policy analysis of Medicaid EPSDT services in Colorado. A successful program at Memorial will increase education and awareness of EPSDT services, enrollment, and access to and utilization of health care services for eligible children. Methodology utilized in this study included questionnaires designed for the EPSDT contract administrator and outreach coordinators/workers; analysis of current federal and state policies; and studies conducted at the federal and state level, and by various advocacy groups. The need for this analysis of EPSDT came about in part through an awareness of increasingly high numbers of children in poverty and who are uninsured. Though the percentage of children living in poverty in Colorado is slightly below the national average (see Table 2), according to data analyzed by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, the percentage of children (0-18) living in poverty in Colorado increased from 10% in 2000 to 16% in 2006, a dramatic increase of 60% surpassed by only one other state in the nation (The Annie E. Casey Foundation, 2008). By comparison, the U.S. percentage of children in poverty during the same time frame rose from 17% to 18% (The Annie E. Casey Foundation, 2008). What kind of health care services are available to this vulnerable and growing group of Coloradans, and what are the barriers that affect their enrollment in, access to and utilization of these health care services? Barriers identified included difficulty with the application process; system and process issues; a lack of providers; and a lack of awareness and knowledge of EPSDT. Fiscal restraints and legislation at the federal and state level are also barriers to increasing enrollment and access to services. Outreach services are a critical component of providing EPSDT services, and there were several recommendations regarding outreach and case management that will benefit the program in the future. Through this analysis and identification of a broad range of barriers, a clearer picture emerged of current challenges within the EPSDT program as well as a broad range of strategies and recommendations to address these challenges. Through increased education and advocacy for EPSDT and the services it encompasses; stronger collaboration and cooperation between all groups involved, including providing a Medical Home for all eligible children; and new legislation putting more money and focus on comprehensive health care for low-income uninsured children; enrollment, access to and utilization of developmentally appropriate and quality health care services can be achieved. ^