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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0017168 (
gastroesophageal reflux disease
)
11,783
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a 4-year-old female with a de novo complex karyotype with multiple chromosomal rearrangements and a distinctive phenotype. Her medical history is significant for having been a twin born at 35 weeks gestation, breech presentation, with feeding problems and poor growth as an infant,
gastroesophageal reflux disease
, peripheral
pulmonic stenosis
, omphalocele, high myopia, and severe mental retardation. She is small for her age with microcephaly, posteriorly sloping forehead, shallow orbits, long palpebral fissures, prominent nose, wide mouth, absent uvula, kyphosis, brachydactyly, bridged palmar crease, and hypertonia. Peripheral blood lymphocytes revealed a karyotype of 46,XX,t(1;12)(p22.3;q21.3),inv(6)(p24q23),t(7;18)(q11.2;q21.2) in all cells. Parental karyotypes and that of her twin were normal. Spectral Karyotyping (SKY) and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with whole chromosome paints for chromosomes 1, 6, 7, 12, and 18 did not reveal additional rearrangements. Prometaphase G-banding analysis suggested that the "inverted" chromosome 6 might contain a cryptic rearrangement. Although no deletion nor duplication was detected using metaphase comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), multicolor high resolution banding (mBAND) demonstrated a double inversion of chromosome 6, resulting in a final karyotype as above but including der(6)(pter --> p23::q21 --> q22.3::q21 --> p23::q22.3 --> qter).
...
PMID:A de novo complex karyotype with two independent balanced translocations and a double inversion of chromosome 6 presenting with multiple congenital anomalies. 1531 75
Noonan syndrome (NS) is a heterogeneous developmental disorder caused by missense mutations in genes involved in the Ras/MAPK signaling pathway, a major mediator of early and late developmental processes. The diagnosis of NS is made on clinical grounds with molecular confirmation of a mutation found in 63% of cases. Key clinical features include short stature, cardiac defects, developmental delay, lymphatic dysplasias, bleeding tendency, and a constellation of distinctive facial features and physical exam findings. The prevalence of medical issues or the development of new ones in adults with NS is not well-studied. This cross-sectional study reports on the prevalence of clinical conditions and their ages of onset in a cohort of 35 adolescents and adults with NS aged 16-68 years old (mean age 28 years). In this cohort, 34 of 35 subjects (97%) had had full PTPN11 sequencing; 37% were PTPN11 positive, 23% were SOS1 positive, and 3% were BRAF positive. Mean adult height in both men and women was at the 3rd-10th centile. The most prevalent clinical findings in this cohort included
pulmonary valve stenosis
(71%), easy bruising (63%),
GERD
(60%), constipation (51%), scoliosis (54%), chronic joint pain (54%), lymphedema (49%), depression (49%), anxiety (49%), Chiari malformation (20%), and osteopenia/osteoporosis (14%). In summary, adults with NS are affected by multi-organ morbidity and require special medical management aimed towards the most prevalent and serious known medical complications. Larger studies characterizing the clinical conditions found in NS adults are needed to provide potential genotype-phenotype correlations that may aid in clinical management.
...
PMID:Medical complications, clinical findings, and educational outcomes in adults with Noonan syndrome. 2316 51
A 21-month-old patient diagnosed as 18 trisomy, having large ventricular septal defect with
pulmonary valve stenosis
, and
gastroesophageal reflux disease
, was admitted for laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication and gastrostomy. Anesthesia was induced with midazolam, fentanyl, and rocuronium, and maintained with sevoflurane and remifentanil. After induction of anesthesia, oxygenation became worse, possibly due to diminished pulmonary blood flow, which was partially resolved with vasopressor administration and fluid infusion. After the abdomen was insufflated, oxygenation improved significantly. We supposed that an increase in systemic vascular resistance due to O2 insufflation augmented pulmonary blood flow and improved the oxygenation. She was extubated the next day and recovered uneventfully. However, we should bear in mind that 18 trisomy patients are frequently complicated by congestive heart disease, and require caution for hemodynamic changes during anesthesia.
...
PMID:[Anesthetic management for laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication in a 18 trisomy patient with congestive heart disease]. 2354 37
Williams-Beuren Syndrome (WBS) is a well-described microdeletion syndrome characterized by specific dysmorphic facial features, peripheral
pulmonic stenosis
, supravalvular aortic stenosis, hypercalcemia, feeding difficulties,
gastroesophageal reflux
, short stature, and specific intellectual disabilities (such as visual spatial problems). WBS is caused by 7q11.23 deletions that contain multiple genes known to contribute to the above phenotype. We report a neonate with a complete atrioventricular canal (CAVC) defect, an atypical cardiac lesion for WBS, and few typical phenotypic features of WBS, diagnosed at 20 days of life.
...
PMID:Atypical Williams syndrome in an infant with complete atrioventricular canal defect. 2627 50