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Enzyme
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (
hernia
)
15,856
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We described a case of late-infantile form of galactosialidosis. This male patient was a product of normal pregnancy. His parents were first cousins. He first sat at eight months, walked and talked at two years of age. His gait gradually became unsteady and he was diagnosed as spastic paraparesis at the age of five years. Abnormally slow learning was first pointed out at seven years of age. At the age of nine years, we evaluated him in detail at our university hospital. Physical examination revealed a short stature for his age, slightly coarse face, short neck, funnel chest, genu, pes and hallucis valgus. Corneal clouding,
hernia
and angiokeratoma were not found. Neurological examination showed mental retardation, bilateral
optic atrophy
without cherry-red spots, and spastic and slightly ataxic gait. Slight muscular atrophy with weakness was also seen in the extremities, more remarkable in the lower limbs. Deep tendon reflexes were hyperactive with bilateral ankle clonus and no extensor planter response. Routine examination of blood, urine and cerebrospinal fluid were normal except for approximately 10% lymphocytes containing cytoplasmic vacuoles. X-ray films of the backbone exhibited vertebral plana with anterior breaking at the second lumbar vertebra level. The electroencephalography showed the multiple spike and slow wave complexes. Brain CT depicted the atrophy of cerebellum. The activities of sialidase and beta-galactosidase were markedly reduced in white blood cells and cultured skin fibroblasts in this patient. His urinary excretion of sialyloligosaccharides increased.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Late-infantile form galactosialidosis with psychomotor retardation and spastic paraparesis]. 251 61
Of 99 children in the Royal Blind School, Edinburgh (which serves Scotland and part of N E England), 15 had
optic atrophy
(hydrocephalus 4, intracranial haemorrhage 2, prematurity 2, fetal distress 2, birth asphyxia 2, cerebral atrophy 1, cardiac arrest during
hernia
operation 1, and leukaemia 1). Fourteen had congenital cataract, 12 congenital retinal aplasia (Leber's congenital amaurosis) and 11 retinopathy of prematurity. There were small numbers in many other diagnostic categories, including three with non-accidental head injury. Mental retardation, spasticity, and nystagmus were frequent other correlates in all diagnostic categories. 'Very probably hereditary' was a conservative attribution in 36, while 'probable' seemed appropriate for 12-that is, almost 48% were hereditary. Only about 11 cases might have been prevented through genetic counselling, which testifies to the frequency of autosomal recessive hereditary disease, although no parents were consanguineous.
...
PMID:Blindness in schoolchildren: importance of heredity, congenital cataract, and prematurity. 365 73
A 60-year-old patient reported a slight decrease in visual acuity with loss of field of vision. He also noted a mild sense of vertigo and a feeling of "pressure in his head". He had undergone laparoscopic bilateral
hernia
repair 3 days before on an outpatient basis. Diagnostic work-up revealed shock-induced anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (AION) of the left eye. Without special treatment measures the head pressure and feeling of weakness subsided considerably in a spontaneous course within 24 h. Three months later partial
optic atrophy
of the affected eye was observed with stable visual acuity of 0.8 and unchanged loss of field of vision.
...
PMID:[Decreased visual acuity and loss of field of vision after inguinal hernia surgery]. 1901 40
COUP-TFI and -TFII are members of the steroid/thyroid nuclear receptor superfamily. Recent clinical studies reveal that COUP-TFI gene mutations are associated with Bosch-Boonstra-Schaaf
optic atrophy
syndrome displaying symptoms of
optic atrophy
, intellectual disability, hypotonia, seizure, autism spectrum disorders, oromotor dysfunction, thin corpus callosum, or hearing defects, and COUP-TFII gene mutations lead to congenital heart defects and/or congenital diaphragmatic
hernia
with developmental delay and mental defects. In this review, we first describe the functions of COUP-TF genes in the morphogenesis of mouse forebrain including cerebral cortex, hippocampus, amygdala complex, hypothalamus, and cortical interneuron. Then, we address their roles in the development of cerebellum, glial cells, neural crest cells, and adult neuronal stem cells. Clearly, the investigations on the functions of COUP-TF genes in the developing mouse central nervous system will benefit not only the understanding of neurodevelopment, but also the etiology of human mental diseases.
...
PMID:COUP-TF Genes, Human Diseases, and the Development of the Central Nervous System in Murine Models. 2852 75