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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0004352 (
autism
)
32,579
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Idiopathic toe-walking is a diagnosis of exclusion when a child presents with bilateral toe-to-toe gait. Although toe-walking is considered part of the normal gait spectrum in development, it is abnormal when persisting past the age of two. Toe-walking may be caused by cerebral palsy, congenital contracture of the Achilles tendon or paralytic muscular disorders such as Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy. Idiopathic toe-walking may be associated with developmental disorders such as
autism
or other myopathic or neuropathic disorders. The majority of disorders causing toe-walking can be ruled out through the history and physical examination, resulting in a diagnosis of idiopathic toe-walking. However, it may be difficult to differentiate mild forms of cerebral palsy, specifically mild
spastic diplegia
, and idiopathic toe-walking. The treatment options for idiopathic toe-walking include observation, conservative methods and surgical methods. Most children can be treated in the primary care setting with either observation or conservative treatment. Patients with severe contracture of the Achilles tendon, or persistent toe-walking, may need surgical intervention. The prognosis of idiopathic toe-walking is favorable with both conservative and surgical treatment allowing children to attain normal function and range of plantarflexion. The following article provides an overview of the background information, differential diagnosis and treatment options for idiopathic toe-walking.
...
PMID:Idiopathic toe-walking. 1843 51
Ten percent of cases of intellectual deficiency in boys are caused by genes located on the X chromosome. X-linked mental retardation (XLMR) includes more than 200 syndromes and 80 genes identified to date. The fragile X syndrome is the most frequent syndrome, due to a dynamic mutation with a CGG triplet amplification. Mental retardation is virtually always present. Phonological and syntactic impairments are often combined with pragmatic language impairment and visuospatial reasoning difficulties. A minority fulfill the criteria for
autism
. In girls, the clinical expression of the complete mutation varies according to the X chromosome inactivation profile. Several XLMR occur as severe early onset encephalopathies: Lowe oculocerebrorenal syndrome, ATR-X syndrome (alpha thalassemia/mental retardation X-linked), Allan-Herdon-Dudley syndrome (MCT8 gene). Two genes, ARX (X-LAG; Partington syndrome) and MECP2 (Rett syndrome in females; mild MR with
spastic diplegia
/psychotic problems in males) are associated with various phenotypes, according to the mutation involved. Oligophrenine 1 (OPHN-1) gene mutations lead to vermal dysplasia. PQBP1 gene mutations (Renpenning syndrome) are responsible for moderate to severe mental deficiency, microcephaly, and small stature. Although some forms of XLMR are not very specific and the phenotype for each given gene is somewhat heterogeneous, a clinical diagnostic strategy is emerging.
...
PMID:X-linked mental deficiency. 2362 80
Patients with germline phosphatidylinositol glycan biosynthesis class A (PIGA) related disorder have historically been categorized into one of two distinct subtypes: a severe form which is often fatal, and a less severe form. However, the increasing number of cases with features indicative of both subtypes raise the possibility of a phenotypic spectrum associated with PIGA disorder. In order to further characterize this phenotypic spectrum, we present two patients with features of both the severe and less severe subtypes with a review of phenotypes reported to date in the literature. In eight year old patient 1, a maternally inherited PIGA likely pathogenic variant was discovered using exome sequencing. He presented with myoclonic epilepsy, mild intellectual disability,
spastic diplegia
, developmental motor delay, and
autism
spectrum disorder. Patient 2 is a 13 year old with focal epilepsy, profound developmental delay, coarse facial features, severe intellectual disability and
autism
spectrum disorder. A de novo PIGA likely pathogenic variant was found through exome sequencing. Both patients had normal alkaline phosphatase levels and are without related organ abnormalities. We conclude that pathogenic PIGA variants cause a spectrum of phenotypes rather than the categories of "severe" and "less severe" as previously posited.
...
PMID:PIGA related disorder as a range of phenotypes rather than two distinct subtypes. 3170 90
The catenin beta-1 (
CTNNB1
) gene, encoding a sub-unit of the cadherin/catenin protein complex that is involved in the Wnt signalling pathway important for proper interneuron development, is considered to be causative for the rare autosomal dominant mental retardation syndrome, formerly called MRD19 but later renamed neurodevelopmental disorder with
spastic diplegia
and visual defects (NEDSDV). Its main characteristics are moderate to severe intellectual disability (ID), disruptive autistic behaviours, microcephaly, absent or limited speech, facial dysmorphisms, peripheral hypertonia/spasticity, motor delay and visual defects. So far, 35 patients have been reported with a de novo loss-of-function variant in
CTNNB1
. In two other patients, a deletion comprising the full gene was found. Four out of the 37 patients were of adult age (range: 27-51 years), while the majority was infant or adolescent (range: 0-20 years). Here, a 32-year-old severely intellectually disabled female patient is described in whom exome sequencing disclosed a de novo heterozygous splice site variant in the
CTNNB1
gene [Chr3(GRCh37): g.41267064G>T; NM_001904.3: 23. c.734+1G>T; r. spl?]. Somatic investigation disclosed significant microcephaly and minor facial dysmorphisms. Neurological examination demonstrated severe kyphoscoliosis, distal spastic tetraparesis, especially of the legs with increased tendon reflexes and bilateral Babinski sign, resulting in severely impaired walking capability with a broad-based gait. Apart from strabismus, no ophthalmological abnormalities were found. Here, the reported variant in the
CTNNB1
gene was not published earlier nor is included in the international databases. This specific variant is considered to be causative for the severe ID,
autism
and the somato-neurological phenotype of the patient and corresponds with a diagnosis of NEDSDV.
...
PMID:A de novo
CTNNB1
Novel Splice Variant in an Adult Female with Severe Intellectual Disability. 3311 39