Robert A. MacCready
Massachusetts Department of Public Health
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Publication
Featured researches published by Robert A. MacCready.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1971
Vivian E. Shih; Harvey L. Levy; Valerie Karolkewicz; Sally Houghton; Mary L. Efron; Kurt J. Isselbacher; Ernest Beutler; Robert A. MacCready
Abstract A total of 374,341 newborn infants in Massachusetts were screened for galactosemia. Of the 177,882 infants tested by bacterial metabolite inhibition assay from March, 1964, to December, 19...
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1972
Robert A. MacCready; Harvey L. Levy
Abstract Mentally retarded non-phenylketonuric offspring from untreated phenylketonuric mothers have been reported upon by a number of groups. To this list we add some additional cases. These offspring commonly have lower I.Qs than their mothers. It is reasonable to postulate that the high concentrations of phenylalanine or its metabolites in the blood of the untreated mother, which is actively transported across the placenta into the blood of the infant, is the cause of the frequently severe damage to the vulnerable infant brain in utero. The fact that artificially produced high concentrations of phenylalanine in the blood of pregnant monkeys and of pregnant rats seems to have culminated in offspring with impaired learning abilities is consistent with this supposition. The results indicating apparently normal mental development, so far, in the nonphenylketonuric offspring of at least 2 phenylketonuric mothers treated with low phenylalanine diets during pregnancy, are encouraging. Because of the advent of routine screening tests for PKU in the newborn, there are an increasing number of phenylketonuric girls, treated in their early years but now on a normal diet, who are approaching the childbearing period and who are mentally normal. Consequently, there is a growing opportunity and responsibility for preventing mental retardation in their future nonphenylketonuric children. It is suggested that dietary treatment during the pregnancies of phenylketonuric mothers be seriously considered, with caution exercised so that the blood concentrations of phenylalanine in the mother under treatment be maintained above 3 but below 8 mg. per 100 ml. Routine urine testing for PKU is, therefore, recommended for all women at the first prenatal visit and at the premarital examination.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1965
Kenneth F. Girard; Harold B. Hitchcock; Geoffrey Edsall; Robert A. MacCready
MASSACHUSETTS has for some years been considered a rabies-free area — for instance, no rabies in man has occurred since 1935, and from 1949 to 1961 no rabid animals were identified in the State. Ne...
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1960
F. Randolf Philbrook; Robert A. MacCready; Henry Van Roekel; E. S. Anderson; C. F. Smyser; F. J. Sanen; William M. Groton
AS the result of an epidemiologic investigation of an outbreak of salmonellosis in a mental hospital in Massachusetts, an unusual opportunity has presented itself to demonstrate a hidden clue to th...
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1953
A. Daniel Rubenstein; Robert A. MacCready
SALMONELLA infection in Massachusetts occurs both sporadically and in epidemic form.1 By and large, most clinical cases are brought to light as a result of cultural studies on patients with gastroi...
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1951
Robert A. MacCready
THE serious shortage of properly qualified medical technologists has been reflected again and again in the frequently inaccurate results of test specimens sent by the Voluntary Laboratory Approval ...
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1964
Mary L. Efron; Dean Young; Hugo W. Moser; Robert A. MacCready
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1957
Robert A. MacCready; Joseph P. Reardon; Ivan Saphra
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1971
Harvey L. Levy; Vivian E. Shih; Valerie Karolkewicz; Wilma A. French; Jane R. Carr; Victoria M. Cass; Joseph L. Kennedy; Robert A. MacCready
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1966
Arthur N. Wilder; Robert A. MacCready