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  Vol. 278 No. 15, October 15, 1997 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Family History and Genetic Risk Factors

Forward to the Future

Reed Edwin Pyeritz, MD, PhD

JAMA. 1997;278(15):1284-1285.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

The family history has long been an intrinsic part of the evaluation of a new patient. While family history is often synonymous these days with genetic history, its origins may date to a time when communicable diseases were much more common, hence the persistent admonition to medical students to ask whether anyone in the family has had tuberculosis. However, as the spectrum of morbidity in developed countries has changed,1,2 so too has the primary purpose of the family history. Today, that evolution continues, driven in large part by burgeoning knowledge about human and medical genetics.

See also pp 1242, 1251, 1262, and 1268.

Until recently, much of the focus of medical genetics has been on rare disorders.3,4 For common disorders, causation was either seemingly easy to ascribe (eg, infectious diseases) or complex (eg, atherosclerosis and cancer), but in neither case considered genetic.

However, during the past decade, increasing . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

From the Departments of Human Genetics, Medicine, and Pediatrics, MCP-Hahnemann School of Medicine, Allegheny University of the Health Sciences, Pittsburgh, Pa.


Footnotes

Reprints: Reed Edwin Pyeritz, MD, PhD, Allegheny General Hospital, 320 E North Ave, Pittsburgh, PA 15212-4772 (e-mail: pyeritz@pgh.auhs.edu).



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