Thalassemia is a group of inherited autosomal recessive blood
disorders that originated in the Mediterranean region. In thalassemia the
genetic defect, which could be either mutation or deletion, results in reduced
rate of synthesis or no synthesis of one of the globin chains that make up hemoglobin.
This can cause the formation of abnormal hemoglobin molecules, thus causing anemia, the
characteristic presenting symptom of the thalassemias.
Thalassemia
is a quantitative problem of too few globins synthesized, whereas sickle-cell disease (a hemoglobinopathy)
is a qualitative problem of synthesis of an incorrectly functioning globin.
Thalassemias usually result in underproduction of normal globin proteins, often
through mutations in regulatory genes. Hemoglobinopathies imply structural
abnormalities in the globin proteins themselves.The two conditions may overlap,
however, since some conditions that cause abnormalities in globin proteins
(hemoglobinopathy) also affect their production (thalassemia). Thus, some
thalassemias are hemoglobinopathies, but most are not. Either or both of these
conditions may cause anemia.
The
two major forms of the disease, alpha- and beta- (see below), are
prevalent in discrete geographical clusters around the world - it is presumed
associated with malarial
endemicity in ancient times. Alpha is prevalent in peoples of Western African
and South Asian descent. It is nowadays found in populations living in Africa
and in the Americas. It is also found in Tharu
in the Terai
region of Nepal
and India.[ It is believed to account for much lower
malaria morbidity and mortality, accounting for the historic ability of Tharus
to survive in heavily malarial areas where others could not.
Beta
thalassemia is particularly prevalent among Mediterranean
peoples, and this geographical association is responsible for its naming: Thalassa is Greek for the sea, Haema is
Greek for blood. In Europe, the highest concentrations of the disease are found
in Greece,
coastal regions in Turkey,
in particular, Aegean Region such as Izmir, Balikesir, Aydin, Mugla, and Mediterranean Region such as Antalya, Adana, Mersin, in parts of
Italy, in
particular, Southern Italy and the lower Po valley. The major
Mediterranean islands (except the Balearics)
such as Sicily, Sardinia, Malta, Corsica, Cyprus, and Crete are heavily
affected in particular. Other Mediterranean people, as well as those in the
vicinity of the Mediterranean, also have high rates of thalassemia, including
people from West
Asia and North Africa. Far from the Mediterranean, South
Asians are also affected, with the world's highest concentration of
carriers (16% of the population) being in the Maldives.
The
thalassemia trait may confer a degree of protection against malaria, which is
or was prevalent in the regions where the trait is common, thus conferring a
selective survival advantage on carriers (known as heterozygous advantage), and perpetuating
the mutation. In that respect, the various thalassemias resemble another genetic
disorder affecting hemoglobin, sickle-cell disease.
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