The digital epidemiology of phenylketonuria, aka folling’s disease: retrospective analysis and geographic mapping via google trends

Authors

  • Ahmed Al-Imam 1. Department of Anatomy and Cellular Biology, College of Medicine, University of Baghdad, Iraq. 2. Department of Postgraduate Medicine, School of Life and Medical Sciences, University of Hertfordshire, United Kingdom. 3. The Canadian Association for Neuroscience. 4. The Japanese Association of Anatomists. http://orcid.org/0000-0003-1846-9424

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/ajms.v9i6.20497

Keywords:

Genetic diseases, Autosomal recessive, Inborn errors of metabolism, Phenylketonuria, Folling’s disease, Phenylalanine hydroxylase, PAH deficiency, PAH gene, Phenylalanine, Tetrahydrobiopterin, Chromosome 12 (human), Google trends, Digital epidemiology, Re

Abstract

Background: Phenylketonuria, commonly known as PKU, is an inherited disorder in which there is an abnormally elevated blood level of the amino acid phenylalanine leading to several pathologies affecting multiple organs including the central nervous system and resulting in debilitating intellectual disability and other neuropsychiatric disorders. Phenylalanine is a building block of several critical proteins within the biological systems.

Aims and Objective: To assess the digital epidemiology and geographic mapping of Phenylketonuria.

Materials and Methods: This study is a retrospective analytic (2013‑2017) of a very large database existing on the surface web known as Google Trends. it aims to extrapolate a statistical inference concerning the digital epidemiology and the geographic mapping of phenylketonuria. The trends database will be explored via thematic keywords specific to the condition of phenylketonuria including “Phenylketonuria [PKU]”, “Phenylalanine”, “Inborn errors of metabolism”, “Tetrahydrobiopterin”, and “Chromosome 12 (human)”.

Results: The digital epidemiology is densely clustered in countries from the developed world, eastern Europe, and Latin America. Surface web users from China appears to possess the highest interest in phenylketonuria. The contribution of the Middle Eastern and Arabic countries to the geographic mapping did not exceed 10.51% at its best. Significant changes existed for year-to-year variations of trends. Statistical outliers were also found, the strongest of which was observed during April 2016 for which there’s no plausible explanation.

Conclusion: Trends databases operating on the surface web represent potent tools of big data that can be exploited to assess the digital epidemiology and geographic mapping of countless phenomenon including rare genetic diseases and inborn errors of metabolism. There are also enormous potentials for real-time and predictive analytics of these databases when investing the application of automation in data collection and principles of machine learning.

Asian Journal of Medical Sciences Vol.9(6) 2018 93-99

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Author Biography

Ahmed Al-Imam, 1. Department of Anatomy and Cellular Biology, College of Medicine, University of Baghdad, Iraq. 2. Department of Postgraduate Medicine, School of Life and Medical Sciences, University of Hertfordshire, United Kingdom. 3. The Canadian Association for Neuroscience. 4. The Japanese Association of Anatomists.

1. Department of Anatomy and Cellular Biology, College of Medicine, University of Baghdad, Iraq.
2. Department of Postgraduate Medicine, School of Life and Medical Sciences, University of Hertfordshire, United Kingdom.
3. The Canadian Association for Neuroscience.
4. The Japanese Association of Anatomists.

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Published

2018-10-29

How to Cite

Al-Imam, A. (2018). The digital epidemiology of phenylketonuria, aka folling’s disease: retrospective analysis and geographic mapping via google trends. Asian Journal of Medical Sciences, 9(6), 93–99. https://doi.org/10.3126/ajms.v9i6.20497

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Original Articles