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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (mental retardation)
15,878 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We studied the abnormal ocular and systemic findings in one case of true triploidy and two cases of triploid mosaicism. A liveborn triploid child 69,XXY, had abnormalities including cebocephaly, a single midline nostril, incomplete cleft palate, transverse palmar creases, partial syndactyly, and ambiguous genitalia. Ocular abnormalities included hypotelorism, blepharophimosis, microcornia, iris coloboma, cataract, persistent hyaloid vasculature, retinal dysplasia, and optic atrophy. A 16-year-old girl with triploid mosaicism had congenital left facial and body hemiatrophy, both growth and mental retardation, left-sided grand mal seizures, incontinentia pigmenti of both legs, partial syndactyly, and generalized weakness. Results of her ocular examination were within normal limits. A 13-year-old boy with triploid mosaicism exhibited both growth and mental retardation, truncal obesity, and required a brace to support his back. Ocular findings included synophrys, bilateral blepharoptosis, and abnormal results of Schirmer tear test. Studies indicate a wide spectrum of ocular and systemic abnormalities occur that are presumably associated with the chromosome error.
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PMID:Ocular findings in triploidy. 41 37

A case of incontinentia pigmenti achromians associated with mental retardation, epilepsy, short stature and ocular anomalies was reported. A study of this case together with a review of the 38 cases in the literature revealed that this entity has been associated with central nervous system involvements at a high frequency. It is necessary, therefore, to consider incontinentia pigmenti achromians as a neurocutaneous syndrome from the viewpoint of pediatric neurology.
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PMID:Incontinentia pigmenti achromians as part of a neurocutaneous syndrome: a case report. 55 51

We report on a 5-year-old boy with failure to thrive, mental retardation, a broad nose, hypertelorism, slight antimongoloid slant palpebral fissures, mild ptosis, microphthalmia, short and wide neck, apparently acyanotic tetralogy of Fallot, dislocation of the left hip, generalized linear and patchy hyperpigmentation, micropenis, and undescended testes. He had mosaicism of 46,XY/47,XY, + 14 in a ratio of 3:1. Comparisons are made with the other reports of trisomy 14 mosaicism and relationship to incontinentia pigmenti.
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PMID:Trisomy 14 mosaicism in a 5-year-old boy. 188 54

Hypomelanosis of Ito (incontinentia pigmenti achromians), a sacrococcygeal complex dysembryoma, seizures, severe cerebral lesions, mental retardation, chorioretinal atrophy, hemihypotrophy of the body, and skeletal anomalies are reported in a female infant of North African origin. Karyotype analysis revealed mosaicism for a microdeletion of the proximal region of 15q similar to that observed in Willi-Prader syndrome. The possibility of gene assignment of Ito's disease or that it may represent a nonspecific marker for mosaicism are discussed.
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PMID:Hypomelanosis of Ito (incontinentia pigmenti achromians) and mosaicism for a microdeletion of 15q1. 346 61

Initially described as incontinentia pigmenti achromians, Ito's hypomelanosis is a congenital disease characterized dermatologically by depigmented maculae arranged in a specific pattern. These maculae appear suddenly, unheralded by an inflammatory process, and are arranged on the limbs as lines and on the trunk as whirlwinds or mottled cakes. Other abnormalities, notably neurological, ophthalmic or musculoskeletal may be associated with this spray-like depigmentation of the skin. We report here three cases of this disease, which is probably more common than the scarcity of cases hitherto published would suggest. Case no. 1. A 9-year-old boy presented since the age of 5 with generalized convulsive fits predominant on the right side. Neurological examinations between fits were negative. IQ, FO and CT scans of the brain were normal. During the first months of life, the child had developed a spray-like depigmentation on the right half of his back and on the anterior and posterior aspects of his right arm. Case no. 2. A 2-year-old girl was examined for a cutaneous depigmentation which had developed when she was about 3 months' old and had progressively extended from her left knee to her left hypochondrium. Case no. 3. An 8-year-old girl presented with mental retardation and myopia, but also with a spray-like depigmentation on the left part of her chest. The skin lesion had been noticed by her parents after she had exposed herself to the sun in a tropical country. Histological examination performed in the first two patients showed some degree of hypopigmentation of the epidermis without pigmentary incontinence.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Ito's hypomelanosis. Review of the literature apropos of 3 cases]. 370 84

A 45,X/46,X,r(X) mosaicism was observed in an incontinentia pigmenti (Bloch-Sulzberger form) female patient, with mental retardation, short stature, and minor dysmorphisms. This observation is compatible with the regional assignment of the incontinentia pigmenti locus to the juxta-centromeric region of the X, the r(X) being of very small size.
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PMID:Incontinentia pigmenti (IP) and r(X). Tentative mapping of the IP locus to the X juxtacentromeric region. 387 68

The main peculiarities of the hypomelanosis of Ito (HI) or incontinentia pigmenti achromians are shown. The most frequent and severe complications of this multisystemic neurocutaneous disease are reviewed. The most severe complications concern to the central nervous system (CNS), mental retardation and epilepsy--both present in more than 50% of cases--being the two most severe and frequent disorders. About 10% of patients with HI show infantile spasms during the first year of life and another 10% have autistic behavior. Moreover, other complications can be observed in some patients. These complications consist of ocular, musculoskeletal and oral alterations, hypotonia, macrocephalia, microcephalia, congenital cardiac malformations, urological and genital malformations and other rarer disorders. Chromosomal anomalies, especially translocations or mosaicisms type are found in about 50% of cases. The study, however, can show the chromosomal abnormalities in the karyotype performed in fibroblasts of the hypopigmented skin while it may be normal in the blood and in skin unaffected.
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PMID:[Hypomelanosis of Ito]. 943 99

We show the complications observed in a large series of children with hypomelanosis of Ito (HI) or incontinentia pigmenti achromians, studied in a neurology service over 30 years. Of the 76 patients, 35 were male (46%) and 41 female (54%) with ages ranging from newborn to 10 years at the time of the first visit. They were thoroughly studied from the clinical, genetic, psychological, neuroradiological, with computed tomography (CT) and/or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and electroencephalographic (EEG) points of view. Mental retardation was observed in 43 cases (57%) of whom eight (10%) showed autistic behavior; 16 (21%) were borderline and only 17 (22%) had a normal mental level (IQ > 85). Thirty-seven patients (49%) had seizures, consisting of infantile spasms in six cases (8%). Twelve cases showed macrocephaly and coarse facies, six had microcephaly, and 14 showed hypotonia with pes valgus and genu valgus. Three cases of cerebellar hypoplasia, another of intracranial arteriovenous malformation and another of distal spinal muscular atrophy were observed as well. Some other anomalies, such as syndactyly, clinodactyly, abnormalities of the skeleton, asymmetry of the facies, ears, body and/or extremities, gynecomastia and asymmetrical breasts, short stature, oral alterations, congenital cardiopathies and genital anomalies, were also occasionally found. Three children died, but necropsy was performed only in one. Anatomical and histological studies did not disclose specific findings.
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PMID:Hypomelanosis of ITO. A study of 76 infantile cases. 953 59

Male patients with Bloch-Sulzberger incontinentia pigmenti (IP type II) are rare and more severely affected than their female counterparts, with a significant occurrence of sex chromosome aneuploidy. This document introduces a new male IP type II patient and reviews 48 males reported with IP. Twenty-eight of the 49 patients meet current criteria for diagnosis of IP type II. The phenotype is variable and the incidence of documented developmental delay is 25%. Five patients had Klinefelter syndrome (47,XXY). Most patients were reported prior to 1961 when chromosome analysis was not available. Biopsy and laboratory reports considered to be "consistent with" the diagnosis of IP were seen in patients meeting criteria as well as those who would not currently be given the diagnosis. The histologic findings considered diagnostic are varied. This variability may be accounted for by differences in stage of disease, biopsy site, histologic technique, and reporting style. Conversely, this may indicate that the diagnostic weight given to the biopsy should be reconsidered. Eosinophilia was not a consistent finding. Overall, differences in reporting, ascertainment, and length of follow-up lead to difficulty in interpreting or predicting the natural history of males with IP type II. Based on the existing literature, they appear to have a higher rate of mental retardation than the general population, but there does not appear to be a correlation between severity of physical and mental involvement. The presence of sex chromosome aneuploidy documented in the more recent cases emphasizes the need for chromosome analysis in any male patient suspected of IP type II.
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PMID:Male cases of incontinentia pigmenti: case report and review. 960 87

In this article, the contribution of Rudolf Happle to the understanding of X-linked skin diseases is reviewed. In 1977 he proposed functional X-chromosomal mosaicism as the genetic mechanism underlying cutaneous anomalies that were seen in a number of X-linked skin diseases such as incontinentia pigmenti or focal dermal hypoplasia. Moreover, he recognized that these cutaneous anomalies followed the lines of Blaschko and thus he could tie in the development of the lines of Blaschko with a datable embryonic event. Convincing proof for the concept of functional X-chromosomal mosaicism was later provided by his group from functional sweat studies in female carriers of the X-linked gene defect hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia showing again on the back of the patient a gross, fountain-like mosaic typical of the lines of Blaschko. Moreover, in the years 1977 to 1981 he recognized the mosaic pattern in a syndrome of chondrodysplasia punctata, linear ichthyosis, patchy cicatricial alopecia, unilateral cataracts, and short stature again as a functional X-chromosomal mosaic becoming manifest exclusively in women and proposed that this syndrome, which is today named after him, is because of an X-linked dominant gene defect. Finally, the puzzling molecular genetics of the Happle syndrome are reviewed. Most likely, the Happle syndrome gene is not lethal for hemizygously affected males but rather similar to the example of epilepsy with mental retardation limited to females, the gene actually spares male gene carriers.
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PMID:Functional X-chromosomal mosaicism of the skin: Rudolf Happle and the lines of Alfred Blaschko. 1039 52


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