Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017168 (gastroesophageal reflux disease)
11,783 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Total laryngectomy was successfully performed for the management of repetitive lower respiratory tract infections in three cases with severe motor and intellectual disabilities syndrome. The patients were thirteen, ten and nine years of age and had cerebral palsy, mental retardation and epilepsy which resulted from neonatal asphyxia and seizures. To treat repetitive lower respiratory tract infections, the patients underwent the operation at the age of nine years and a month, seven years and six months, and six years and eleven months, respectively. Postoperatively, the respiratory tract infections were remarkably reduced for two to four years. Total laryngectomy is one of the best methods for the prevention of aspiration pneumonia, because it separates trachea and esophagus completely. The operation is indicated for children with influx of saliva into trachea and gastroesophageal reflux. The family should recognize that this operation causes permanent loss of voice and speech. The bronchoscopy, upper gastrointestinal tract barium studies and esophageal pH monitoring should be performed before the operation. Our cases fulfilled all of these indications. Laryngectomy should be considered as an effective method of respiratory management for cases of severe motor and intellectual disabilities syndrome, although its application should be carefully examined from the point of improvement of quality of life for patients.
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PMID:[Successful total laryngectomy in three cases with severe motor and intellectual disabilities syndrome for the management of repetitive lower respiratory tract infections]. 1048 66

Surgical treatment of cardiac achalasia in children is still the main line of treatment with a success rate of 70-80%. Balloon dilatation is less widely used due to inappropriate size of balloons. The authors report on their experience in 11 children with cardiac achalasia over the last 7 years using balloon dilatation as the treatment of choice, 8 boys and 3 girls with ages ranging from 1.5-14 years (average 7.5 years) were investigated. One family (brother and sister) presented with no glucocorticoid deficiency or other anomalies, one patient had mental retardation, the rest had no associated anomalies. All patients presented with vomiting, 7 with dysphagia, 6 with loss of weight, 5 with recurrent chest infection and 2 with retrosternal pain. Radiological diagnosis was accurate in all patients, endoscopy with biopsy were done to confirm diagnosis and exclude other pathology, manometry yielded positive results in 4 patients. Dilatation was done under general anesthesia with fluoroscopic control, balloons were used over a guide wire (balloon sizes were 18-35 mm). Seven patients had 2 sessions and 4 had 3 sessions with radiological follow-up after the second dilatation. Follow-up ranged from 2-7 years: excellent results were achieved in 8 patients (72.7%) with disappearance of symptoms and marked radiologic improvement, 2 still have mild symptoms with overall success (90.9%), one had mild gastroesophageal reflux, controlled medically, and one had mild dysphagia but his status was improved compared to that before dilatation. One patient had recurrent dysphagia necessitating cardiomyotomy (9.1%). Results were not related to age or sex. The authors recommend balloon dilatation in children with cardiac achalasia as the treatment of choice or even as the only feasible treatment.
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PMID:Cardiac achalasia in children. Dilatation or surgery? 1058 88

We present 4 brothers with developmental delay, minor anomalies, and symptoms due to gastrointestinal dysmotility. There was some resemblance with FG syndrome, although none of the brothers had sufficient findings to make this diagnosis. The index case presented with at age 1 month with screaming episodes, mild gastro-esophageal reflux (GER), and severe constipation. Esophageal manometry studies were consistent with the diagnosis of "nutcracker esophagus." Symptomatic and manometric improvement followed treatment with oral calcium channel blockers. Two older and less severely affected brothers had similar manometric findings but did not require treatment. A fourth brother with symptoms in infancy now has normal esophageal manometry findings. These boys in all likelihood have an X-linked syndrome with manifestations of FG syndrome, in which treatment with calcium channel blockers, produces clinical and manometric improvement. The FG syndrome is an X-linked syndrome of multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation with facultative manifestations of gastrointestinal dysmotility, including gastro-esophageal reflux, severe feeding difficulties, and constipation. Esophageal dysmotility, in particular "nutcracker esophagus," should be suspected in infants with the FG syndrome and screaming attacks.
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PMID:Esophageal dysmotility in brothers with an FG-like syndrome. 1075 39

To study the phenotypic spectrum and management of holoprosencephaly (HPE), we reviewed the findings of eight children with HPE from 3 to 10 years of age, who underwent intervention programs and rehabilitation at our center. One patient had alobar HPE, three semilobar HPE, and four lobar HPE. All patients had postnatal growth retardation, and seven showed a decreased BMI (< 25% tile). All patients had severe developmental delay and mental retardation (DQ < 40), showing no obvious correlation between their severity and the type of HPE. Neurologically seven patients had spasticity (3 spastic quadriplegia, 2 spastic diplegia, 2 mixed-type), except one patient with a 7q deletion [46,XY,del(7) (q35)] who had generalized hypotonia. Seven had variable types of seizures. All patients had feeding difficulties and were assessed by speech-language therapists. Four patients required tube feeding, four had gastroesophageal reflux disease. Recurrent respiratory tract infection was common. Three patients had abnormal serum sodium concentration (1 diabetes insipidus, 1 idiopathic hypernatremia, 1 hyponatremia). No family history of HPE was elicited. In conclusion, patients with HPE should be followed up closely for complications such as feeding difficulty, malnutrition, seizures, spasticity, infection, and osmoreceptor-hypothalamus-hypophyseal axis abnormalities.
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PMID:[Clinical spectrum and management of holoprosencephaly]. 1091 68

Barrett's esophagus, a premalignant condition, is recognized as stratified squamous epithelium of the esophagus substituted by columnar epithelium. The risk factors for development of Barrett's esophagus include frequent gastroesophageal reflux, esophageal stricture, male sex and mental retardation, but there is no report of Barrett's esophagus in children with de Lange syndrome. We report a 7-year-old boy who was diagnosed as de Lange syndrome shortly after birth and had gastroesophageal reflux since early infancy. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopic examination revealed a cauliflower-like mass and a pink-red velvety mass over the lower third of the esophagus. Biopsy showed goblet cells metaplasia, confirming Barrett's esophagus. We suggest surveillance of Barrett's esophagus could be done ahead of schedule in children with long-standing gastroesophageal reflux or with de Lange syndrome.
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PMID:Barrett's esophagus in a child with de Lange syndrome: report of one case. 1092 May 50

As the laparoscopic approach to gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) was introduced in pediatric surgery in the last decade of the 20th century, it became apparent that this approach was beneficial. The favorable results have led to a more general acceptance and implementation of this type of surgery at the beginning of the 21st century. We give an overview of the first decade of laparoscopic antireflux procedures in children with an emphasis on the laparoscopic Thal fundoplication and its implication on morbidity and cure of GERD in the long term both for normal and mentally handicapped children. Between 1993 and 2002, 149 children with GERD underwent 157 laparoscopic antireflux procedures, of whom 48% were mentally handicapped. Follow-up ranged from 6 months to 9 years (median age 4.5 years). Nineteen children died. All but one were not related to the antireflux procedure. Immediate relief of symptoms occurred in 120 children (80.5%). In 29 children, the results were less than optimal. Eight patients underwent a laparoscopic redo procedure (5.4%). However, none of the children with a follow-up of more than 5 years show any symptoms anymore. In conclusion, the laparoscopic Thal fundoplication is a safe procedure, and results in the long term are favorable, irrespective of the nature of the cause, ie, mental retardation.
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PMID:Long-term results after laparoscopic Thal procedure in children. 1240 25

We have recently mapped a new rare form of spastic paraplegia complicated by bilateral cataracts, gastroesophageal reflux with persistent vomiting, and amyotrophy to chromosome 10q23.3-q24.2. This locus, named SPG9, is located in an interval spanning about 12 cM of genomic DNA, between markers D10S536 and D10S603, where different neurological disorders have been mapped. In particular, a gene for partial epilepsy has been assigned to a 3 cM interval between markers D10S185 and D10S577, which is completely included in the SPG9 critical region. A few families affected with spastic paraplegia and epilepsy have been reported; in the present study, we tested a pedigree with concurrence of spastic paraplegia, epilepsy, and mental retardation inherited as an autosomal dominant trait, using markers located in the SPG9 interval. Haplotype reconstruction excluded the linkage to 10q23.3-q24.2. In addition, the seven different loci so far reported to be associated with autosomal dominant pure forms of spastic paraplegia have been tested and excluded by linkage analysis and haplotype reconstruction, including SPG4 on chromosome 2p22-p21, where a familial form of spastic paraplegia associated with dementia and epilepsy has been mapped. These data confirm genetic heterogeneity in familial spastic paraplegia with epilepsy and suggest a specific locus for the family here analyzed.
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PMID:Genetic heterogeneity in inherited spastic paraplegia associated with epilepsy. 1256 7

We report a new patient with terminal deletion of chromosome 2 with breakpoint at 2q36 and five additional new patients with 2q terminal deletion with breakpoint at 2q37. Hemidiaphragmatic hernia is a novel finding in one patient with a breakpoint at 2q37.1. In comparing these patients to 60 previously reported individuals with 2q terminal deletions, certain physical abnormalities are loosely associated with positions of breakpoint. For example, facial features (e.g., prominent forehead, depressed nasal bridge, and dysmorphic ears and nose), short stature, and short hands and feet were frequent in patients with breakpoints at or proximal to 2q37.3. Reports of horseshoe kidney and Wilms tumor were limited to patients with a breakpoint at 2q37.1, and structural brain anomalies and tracheal anomalies were reported only in patients with breakpoints at or proximal to 2q37.1. Cleft palate was reported only in patients with the most proximal breakpoints (2q36 or 2q35). Neurological effects including developmental delay, mental retardation, autistic-like behavior, and hypotonia were typical in this patient population but did not stratify in severity according to breakpoint. Terminal deletion of the long arm of chromosome 2 should be considered in the infant with marked hypotonia, poor feeding, gastroesophageal reflux, and growth delay, and the older child with developmental delay, autistic behavior, and the characteristic facial and integumentary features described herein. Assignment of clinical features to specific breakpoints and refinement of predictive value may be useful in counseling.
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PMID:Chromosome 2q terminal deletion: report of 6 new patients and review of phenotype-breakpoint correlations in 66 individuals. 1538 75

X-linked alpha thalassaemia mental retardation (ATR-X) syndrome in males is associated with profound developmental delay, facial dysmorphism, genital abnormalities and alpha thalassaemia. Female carriers are usually physically and intellectually normal. So far, 168 patients have been reported. Language is usually very limited. Seizures occur in about one third of the cases. While many patients are affectionate with their caregivers, some exhibit autistic-like behaviour. Patients present with facial hypotonia and a characteristic mouth. Genital abnormalities are observed in 80% of children and range from undescended testes to ambiguous genitalia. Alpha-thalassaemia is not always present. This syndrome is X-linked recessive and results from mutations in the ATRX gene. This gene encodes the widely expressed ATRX protein. ATRX mutations cause diverse changes in the pattern of DNA methylation at heterochromatic loci but it is not yet known whether this is responsible for the clinical phenotype. The diagnosis can be established by detection of alpha thalassaemia, identification of ATRX gene mutations, ATRX protein studies and X-inactivation studies. Genetic counselling can be offered to families. Management is multidisciplinary: young children must be carefully monitored for gastro-oesophageal reflux as it may cause death. A number of individuals with ATR-X are fit and well in their 30s and 40s.
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PMID:Alpha thalassaemia-mental retardation, X linked. 1672 15

We report the identification of microdeletions of 16q11.2q12.2 by microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) in two individuals. The clinical features of these two individuals include hypotonia, gastroesophageal reflux, ear anomalies, and toe deformities. Other features include developmental delay, mental retardation, hypothyroidism, and seizures. The identification of common clinical features in these two individuals and those of one other report suggests microdeletion of 16q12.1q12.2 is a rare, emerging syndrome. These results illustrate that aCGH is particularly suited to identify rare chromosome abnormalities in patients with apparently non-syndromic idiopathic mental retardation and birth defects.
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PMID:Identification of a previously unrecognized microdeletion syndrome of 16q11.2q12.2. 1881 97


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