BettyM. Dean
St Bartholomew's Hospital
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Publication
Featured researches published by BettyM. Dean.
The Lancet | 1981
A.N. Gorsuch; J. Lister; BettyM. Dean; K.M. Spencer; J.M. Mcnally; Gian Franco Bottazzo; A.G. Cudworth
In a prospective investigation of the prediabetic period before onset of type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes, HLA genotypes were determined in 582 healthy parents and siblings of 160 affected children. Islet cell antibody was sought by both the conventional (ICA-IgG) and the complement fixation (CF-ICA) techniques during regular prospective observation over a mean period of 2.0 years. 4 siblings and 2 parents became diabetic; the interval before detection of any biochemical abnormality exceeded a year in 4 of these (range 3-30 months), and in all cases ICA-IgG was positive from the outset, CF-ICA being positive in 5. These observations suggest that the initiation of pathogenesis may precede the abrupt clinical onset of diabetes by several years, even in children. This has important implications, both for research and for possible future prophylaxis.
The Lancet | 1980
Gian Franco Bottazzo; A.N. Gorsuch; BettyM. Dean; A.G. Cudworth; Deborah Doniach
Evidence is presented for the existence of a separate species of islet-cell antibodies which fix complement. Investigations in type I diabetics, non-diabetic polyendocrine patients, and unaffected first-degree relatives of type I diabetic probands show that the complement-fixing islet-cell antibodies are more closely related to the onset of clinical disease than the conventional islet-cell antibody, and they tend to disappear more rapidly. The complement-fixing antibodies may reflect damage of pancreatic beta cells more selectively and may be preferable to the conventional antibody as a serological marker for studying the natural history of type I diabetes.
The Lancet | 1984
KateM Spencer; BettyM. Dean; Anne Tarn; J Lister; Gian Franco Bottazzo
Complement-fixing islet-cell antibodies (CF-ICA) were found in 20 out of 685 unaffected first-degree relatives of children with type 1 diabetes. During a 5-year follow-up, 7 of the 20 became diabetic, 1 continued to show the antibodies without any abnormality of glucose tolerance, and 12 subjects lost them without the disease developing. Although CF-ICA are useful as a marker of active insulitis they should not at present be used to define subjects who might benefit from preventive immunosuppression.
The Lancet | 1988
A. C. Tarn; BettyM. Dean; G. Schwarz; JaniceM. Thomas; David Ingram; Gian Franco Bottazzo; E. A. M. Gale
The Lancet | 1986
H J Bodansky; BettyM. Dean; Gian Franco Bottazzo; P.J Grant; J Mcnally; M.H. Hambling; J.K Wales
The Lancet | 1984
H J Bodansky; J.M. Littlewood; Gian Franco Bottazzo; BettyM. Dean; M.H. Hambling
The Lancet | 1982
BettyM. Dean; Ricardo Pujol-Borrell; Gian Franco Bottazzo
The Lancet | 1966
BettyM. Dean; WendyJ. Griffin; R. W. E. Watts
The Lancet | 1963
G.L. Atkins; BettyM. Dean; WendyJ. Griffin; E.F. Scowen; R. W. E. Watts
The Lancet | 1983
BettyM. Dean; Ricardo Pujol-Borrell; Deborah Doniach; Gian Franco Bottazzo