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Clinical and Laboratory Findings in Jewish and Bedouin Patients in Southern Israel Who Were Diagnosed with Factor VII Deficiency

Congenital factor VII deficiency is a rare recessive autosomal bleeding disorder with a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations. To compare the clinical and laboratory findings in Jewish and Bedouin patients with factor VII deficiency. The clinical and laboratory findings of patients with factor VI...

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Published in:The Israel Medical Association journal 2019-05, Vol.21 (5), p.318-321
Main Authors: Blechman, Shahar, Fruchtman, Yariv, Perry, Zvi H, Mazar, Julia, Ben Harosh, Miriam, Abed, Abuquidar, Rozenberg, Nurit, Kenet, Gila, Leibovitz, Eugene
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container_end_page 321
container_issue 5
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container_title The Israel Medical Association journal
container_volume 21
creator Blechman, Shahar
Fruchtman, Yariv
Perry, Zvi H
Mazar, Julia
Ben Harosh, Miriam
Abed, Abuquidar
Rozenberg, Nurit
Kenet, Gila
Leibovitz, Eugene
description Congenital factor VII deficiency is a rare recessive autosomal bleeding disorder with a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations. To compare the clinical and laboratory findings in Jewish and Bedouin patients with factor VII deficiency. The clinical and laboratory findings of patients with factor VII deficiency treated at Soroka Medical Center, a tertiary hospital in Israel, from 2005 to 2015 were analyzed regarding blood factor levels, illness severity, treatment administration, and disease outcome. Seventy-eight patients were enrolled (1:13,000 of the population in southern Israel) of whom 26 were diagnosed with severe factor VII deficiency (1:40,000). Sixty (76.9%) patients were Jewish and 18 (23.1%) were Bedouin. In univariable analysis, Bedouin patients exhibited a more severe illness, with significantly higher complication and fatality rates, and required more preventive treatment than the Jewish patients. The prevalence of congenital factor VII deficiency (including severe deficiency) in the Jewish and Bedouin populations of southern Israel is higher than previously reported. The clinical spectrum of the disease was found to be more severe in the Bedouin population.
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source Freely Accessible Science Journals - check A-Z of ejournals
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Arabs - statistics & numerical data
Child, Preschool
Factor VII Deficiency - congenital
Factor VII Deficiency - diagnosis
Factor VII Deficiency - ethnology
Factor VII Deficiency - mortality
Female
Hematologic Tests - methods
Hematologic Tests - statistics & numerical data
Humans
Infant
Israel - epidemiology
Jews - statistics & numerical data
Male
Middle Aged
Mortality
Patient Care Management - methods
Prevalence
Severity of Illness Index
title Clinical and Laboratory Findings in Jewish and Bedouin Patients in Southern Israel Who Were Diagnosed with Factor VII Deficiency
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