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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In two neonate girls with vesicular skin lesions,
incontinentia pigmenti
(Bloch-Sulzberger syndrome) was diagnosed. This rare X-linked dominant ectodermal disease can cause abnormalities in several organ systems. Most prominent are the dermatological abnormalities, developing in 4 stages: the vesicular stage, the verrucous stage, the hyperpigmentation phase, and the atrophic phase. In addition to the cutaneous manifestations, many patients have anomalies of nails, hair and teeth. Serious related abnormalities of the eyes (intraocular vasculopathy) and central nervous system (convulsions,
mental retardation
) may occur. In 1989 the locus for the
incontinentia pigmenti
mutation was shown to be present on Xq28. Recently it was shown that the causative mutation is located on the NEMO ('NF-kappa B essential modulator') gene. A NEMO knock-out mouse model shows a dermatopathy of a transient nature, resembling the skin lesions in patients with
incontinentia pigmenti
.
...
PMID:[Two neonates with vesicular skin lesions due to incontinentia pigmenti]. 1172 18
A female patient with non-syndromic
mental retardation
was shown by high resolution GTL banding to have inherited an apparently balanced translocation, 46,X,t(X;8)(q28;q12)mat. Replication studies in the mother and daughter showed a skewed X inactivation pattern in lymphocytes, with the normal X chromosome preferentially inactivated. The mother also had significant intellectual disability. To investigate the possibility that a novel candidate gene for XLMR was disrupted at the X chromosome translocation breakpoint, we mapped the breakpoint using fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH). This showed that the four known genes involved in non-syndromic
mental retardation
in Xq28, FMR2, SLC6A8, MECP2, and GDI1, were not involved in the translocation. Intriguingly, we found that the X chromosome breakpoint in the daughter could not be defined by a single breakpoint spanning genomic clone and further analysis showed a 650 kb submicroscopic duplication between DXS7067 and DXS7060 on either side of the X chromosome translocation breakpoint. This duplicated region contains 11 characterised genes, of which nine are expressed in brain. Duplication of one or several of the genes within the 650 kb interval is likely to be responsible for the
mental retardation
phenotype seen in our patient. Xq28 appears to be an unstable region of the human genome and genomic rearrangements are recognised as major causes of two single gene defects, haemophilia A and
incontinentia pigmenti
, which map within Xq28. This patient therefore provides further evidence for the instability of this genomic region.
...
PMID:Identification of a 650 kb duplication at the X chromosome breakpoint in a patient with 46,X,t(X;8)(q28;q12) and non-syndromic mental retardation. 1262 34
Incontinentia Pigmenti is an X-linked dominant neurocutaneous disorder with central nervous system manifestations in 30% of cases, including seizures and
mental retardation
. Ischemic or hemorrhagic cerebrovascular accidents have been reported rarely in
incontinentia pigmenti
. Chart review and literature search was performed following identification of the index case. We describe a patient with
incontinentia pigmenti
who developed bilateral cerebrovascular accidents in the neonatal period, with resultant severe neurologic sequelae. This is the second reported case of bilateral cerebrovascular accidents in a patient with
incontinentia pigmenti
. This finding may be secondary to cerebrovascular anomalies, similar to those observed in the retina. Recognition of cerebrovascular accidents as a complication of
incontinentia pigmenti
will hopefully lead to earlier recognition and treatment.
...
PMID:Bilateral cerebrovascular accidents in incontinentia pigmenti. 1367 26
Incontinentia pigmenti is an X-linked neurocutaneous disorder which is often lethal in males. Ectodermal tissues are involved, and affected females often have abnormalities of skin, teeth, hair, eyes, and the central nervous system. Central nervous system involvement ranges from none to multiple strokes, seizures, and
mental retardation
. Deletions in the nuclear factor kappa beta essential modulator gene at Xq28 are present in 70-80% of patients with
incontinentia pigmenti
. White matter abnormalities have been reported in females with significant neurologic involvement. This report describes a neurologically intact child with deletion positive
incontinentia pigmenti
with significant white matter involvement, broadening the scope of this finding in
incontinentia pigmenti
.
...
PMID:Abnormal white matter in a neurologically intact child with incontinentia pigmenti. 1735 58
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