Text Only
Search

 
Study: African-Americans More Susceptible to Some Diseases


05 December 2004
Berman report - Download 310k - Download (Real) audio clip
Berman report - Download 310k - Listen (Real) audio clip

A University of Pittsburgh study indicates genetic variants may be more prevalent in African-Americans, which may explain why they may be more likely than whites to develop certain potentially life-threatening illnesses.

African-Americans are more likely than whites to suffer from kidney disease, stroke, and premature birth labor.  Inflammation is common to these and other autoimmune disorders. 

In attempting to find out why blacks are stricken more often than whites, researchers, led by Roberta Ness of the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania, examined a host of gene variants that increase inflammation.  

Genes contain hereditary information in the form of DNA in a cell's nucleus and control the production of proteins.

The study involved 180 African-American women and 400 white women who came to the University of Pittsburgh to give birth between 1997 and 2001.

The researchers found that African-Americans had many more variants in regulatory proteins than white Americans.  Even though African-American women were more likely than white women to carry some of these variants, the variants were present in fewer than half of the black women.

Dr. Ness says not all African-Americans have a genetic predisposition to an autoimmune disease, nor will all those with a predisposition develop a disease. 

Dr. Ness says a person with a predisposition to autoimmune disease has to be exposed to an environmental trigger.  She says there are many conditions that might trigger autoimmune disorders, such as heart disease and diabetes.

"We know absolutely for certain that a huge determinant of racial disparities are socio-economic status, living conditions, behaviors," said Dr. Ness.  "I mean these are very different in our country between African-Americans and whites.  And they are probably a very big part of the picture." 

Earlier studies, including a report by researchers at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, have noted that African-Americans are more likely to have genetic mutations associated with inflammation.

The University of Pittsburgh study connecting genetic variants and immune system disorders was published in the American Journal of Epidemiology.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Top Story
Russian General: Withdrawal from Georgia to Take 10 Days  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Taliban Claims Responsibility for  Pakistan Bombings  Audio Clip Available
Russia Suspends Cooperation With NATO  Audio Clip Available
US, Iraq Close to Agreement on US Troop Withdrawal
Israel Warns Against US, International Pressure for Palestinian Agreement  Audio Clip Available
US Sees Prospect of Better Relations With Belarus
Zimbabwean Opposition Warns Convening Parliament Violates Power-Sharing Deal  Audio Clip Available
Somalia Peace Deal Jeopardized by Continuing Violence
Darfurian Refugees in CAR Receive Welcome in Village Not Camps  Audio Clip Available
Chinese Police Sentence 6 Foreigners to 10 Days Detention
Experts Debate Legacy of Beijing Olympics  Audio Clip Available