Multifactorial Disorders
Posted by bhavin | Posted in Multifactorial Disorder | Posted on 4:55 AM
It is studied by researchers that a genetic component is responsible for most of the diseases and conditions in human beings. Some disorders like the cystic fibrosis or the sickle cell anemia are a result of mutations in a single gene. However, the cause of many other diseased conditions is very complex. Some of the common disorders like diabetes, heart disease and obesity are not a result of a single genetic cause, but they are caused due to the result of multiple genes, in combination with the environmental factors as well as the lifestyle of the person. Multifactorial Disorder is caused by the interaction of genetic and non-genetic factors along with the environmental factors.
Multifactorial Disorders are frequently seen clustering in families, but they do no have a well-established pattern of inheritance. Thus, it becomes difficult to determine whether a person is at risk to inherit or pass on this disorder to the next generation. Multifactorial Disorders are very complex, hence difficult to treat as well as study as the particular factor responsible for most of these disorders are not yet identified.
There are many common diseases seen running in the family, but the simple inheritance pattern of a single gene disorder is seen lacking there. These Multifactorial Disorders includes diseases like epilepsy, manic depression, asthma, schizophrenia and hypertension. Some of the developmental abnormalities also come under this category like the cleft palate, neural tube defects like spina bifida and congenital heart defects.
The Multifactorial Disorders have a very low heritability in comparison with the single gene disorder. For instance: only 5-7% of your close relatives or family members of diabetics suffer from the same disease, and lower would be the case for single gene disorder such as cystic fibrosis. This clearly states that a single genetic factor is never responsible to cause diseased conditions in your body. There are a number of genes that combine along with the environmental factors like exposure to hazardous chemicals or poor diets, which cause disorders in a person.
The occurrence of the Multifactorial Disorders is thought to be dependent on the balance of risks. There exists a balance between the variants of genes with positive as well as negative effects, and between environmental factors again with positive as well as negative effects. Too many negative factors, both environmental and genetic may tilt the balance towards various disorders.
In a Multifactorial Disorder, sometimes the risk may depend on the sex of the affected person. For instance, pyloric stenosis is a Multifactorial Disorder occurring five times more often in males as compared to females. If a female suffers from pyloric stenosis, her as well as her parent’s risk of having other child affected with this condition will be higher than if a male child would be suffering with it. The occurrence of this condition in females has a higher genetic liability apparently, a number of abnormal genes are isolating in the family.
Thus, we can shortly state that there is a similar risk for the first-degree relatives such as parents, siblings or offspring’s to develop Multifactorial Disorder. The severity of the disorder and the sex of the person can play a role in modifying the risk. Some of the common chronic diseases are Multifactorial Disorders of the genes. The conditions with Multifactorial Disorder include cancer, birth defects, coronary artery diseases and mental disorders.
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