Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (mental retardation)
15,878 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Supravalvular aortic stenosis is either a syndrome combined with typical face characteristics mental retardation and peripheral pulmonary artery stenosis or it occurs as an isolated congenital heart defect. The diagnosis was confirmed in 137 patients by means of catheterization and angiocardiography; 35 pediatric and 10 adult patients were considered to be candidates for corrective surgery because of the severity of their disease. Age varied from 3 to 32 years. 7 patients (15,5%) died. Recatheterization was performed in 12 children 5,6 +/- 4,1 years after surgery. Left ventricular pressures were decreased from 184,1 +/- 28,4 to 155,5 +/- 32,1 mm Hg, and the pressure gradients between left ventricle and the aorta fell from 101,2 +/- 19,7 to 29,1 +/- 23,1 mm Hg. The postoperative values varied between 0 and 80 mm Hg. Operative results are discussed in relation to the anatomical type malformation and the operative technique.
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PMID:[Hemodynamic results of surgery for congenital supravalvular aortic stenoses (author's transl)]. 71 56

There are few published reports of adults with Williams syndrome (WS). We have evaluated ten adult WS patients. The patients in our study were very variable in clinical presentation, ranging from severely affected patients with complicated medical histories to mildly affected patients who are generally in good health. Cardiovascular anomalies and hypertension were frequent. Supravalvular aortic stenosis was seen in four patients, mitral valve prolapse in three, bicuspid aortic valve in one, valvular aortic stenosis in one, and pulmonary stenosis with right ventricular hypertrophy in one. Typical facial features included stellate irides, prominent cheeks, full lips, and micrognathia. Mental retardation was seen in all patients. Verbal skills were better developed than motor skills. All patients in our study lead active lives, and most are involved in sports. Some hold supervised jobs. Eight of our patients live with their parents and two in group homes. Independent living is restricted by their mental and adaptive limitations.
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PMID:Williams syndrome in adults. 148 39

The Authors describe a case of William-Beuren Syndrome, also know as "Fanconi-Schlesinger Syndrome" or "Idiopathic Hypercalcaemia, supravalvular aortic stenosis, elfin facies syndrome". Irritability and chronic constipation are early features. Hypercalcaemia may occur in infancy but rarely after 1 year age. The facies is characteristic. Supravalvular aortic stenosis is the most frequent cardiac abnormality. Other common features are short stature, mental retardation and significant behavioural disorders. In this case report typical facies, short stature, behavioural disorders are associated with epilepsy in early years of life. Hypercalcaemia or cardiovascular malformation were not found.
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PMID:[William-Beuren syndrome: description of a case]. 178 14

Supravalvular aortic stenosis (SVAS) can be inherited as an isolated autosomal dominant trait or can be a component manifestation of the Williams syndrome. Some consider the Williams syndrome to be due to more severe expression of the gene defect that causes isolated SVAS. We describe a family with isolated SVAS that is the largest thoroughly studied family with this disorder to our knowledge; no patients in this family had Williams syndrome. Five members of this family were reported by Lewis et al. (Dis Chest 55:372-379, 1969). We reevaluated this family and now include examinations of the parents, additional sibs and children of the original 5 patients. Twenty relatives had physical and echocardiographic examinations. In addition, information from outside sources was obtained on 7 relatives not personally evaluated. The SVAS showed marked variability of expression and was not associated with mental retardation or with the facial manifestations of Williams syndrome. We think that previous reports of Williams syndrome reputedly occurring within the same family as isolated autosomal dominant SVAS were inadequately documented. Based on our family and review of the literature, we suggest that isolated SVAS and Williams syndrome represent clinically distinct entities.
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PMID:Autosomal dominant supravalvular aortic stenosis: large three-generation family. 265 89

Familial supravalvular aortic stenosis is a rare autosomal dominant condition. It may be distinguished from the Williams-Beuren syndrome by the absence of the characteristic dysmorphic appearances and of mental retardation. The case of a 9-year-old girl with a severe surgical stenosis led to the diagnosis of the same malformation in the mother and two brothers. This family adds to the 121 cases reported in the literature describing the main features of SVAS. Molecular biological advances have shown that familial SVAS and the Williams syndrome are due to mutation of the elastin gene located at 7q11-23. In the Williams syndrome the allele of this gene is completely absent and there is also probably deletion of contiguous genes, which explains involvement of cognitive function. In SVAS, the genetic lesion, mutation or microdeletion is more limited, explaining the usually isolated aortic malformation. Other studies are necessary to confirm these results.
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PMID:[Familial supravalvular aortic stenosis. Investigation in a family and review of the literature]. 929 57

Supravalvular aortic stenosis is a rare cause of left ventricular outflow obstruction in adults. It occurs as an isolated defect sporadically or on a hereditary basis with an autosomal dominant trait without further phenotypical anomalies, or as part of the Williams syndrome with mental retardation and multiple other anomalies. This lesion was proved to result from a defect of the elastin coding gene. Supravalvular aortic stenosis is frequently associated with cardiovascular defects, particularly of the peripheral pulmonary arteries, thoracic aorta, carotid, subclavian, and coronary arteries and the aortic valve. The coronary arteries are subject to an increased perfusion pressure leading to dilatation, tortuosity and accelerated arteriosclerosis. We give details of a 35-year-old patient in whom a previously asymptomatic supravalvular aortic stenosis is associated with an excessive dilatation of the right coronary artery and the left anterior descending coronary artery as well as an ostium stenosis of the left common carotid artery. The patient did not present any phenotypical anomalies of the Williams syndrome.
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PMID:[Congenital tubular supravalvular aortic stenosis with massive coronary artery dilatation in a 35-year-old man]. 1079 76

Three clinical conditions displaying phenotypic overlap have been linked to mutation or deletion of the elastin gene at 7q11.23. Supravalvar aortic stenosis, an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by elastin arteriopathy, is caused by mutation or intragenic deletions of ELN resulting in loss of function. Autosomal dominant cutis laxa, a primarily cutaneous condition, is the result of frameshift mutations at ELN that cause a dominant-negative effect on elastic fiber structure. Williams syndrome, a neurodevelopmental disorder is due to a 1.5 Mb deletion that includes ELN and at least 15 contiguous genes. The disorder is characterized by dysmorphic facies, mental retardation or learning difficulties, elastin arteriopathy, a unique cognitive profile of relative strength in auditory rote memory and language and extreme weakness in visuospatial constructive cognition, and a typical personality that includes overfriendliness, anxiety, and attention problems. The understanding of these disorders has progressed from phenotypic description to identification of causative mutations and insight into pathogenetic mechanisms for some aspects of the phenotype.
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PMID:Williams syndrome and related disorders. 1170 37

We report supravalvular aortic stenosis in a 12 year old patient who presented with mental retardation, malformed teeth, broad lower lips, pectus carinatum, clinodactyly, kyphoscoliosis with symptoms of shortness of breath. On examination presence of better volume pulse in right radial artery with ejection systolic murmur best heard in right 2(nd) intercostal space were noted. Patient was diagnosed as having William's syndrome with investigations demonstrating Supravalvular aortic stenosis with a gradient of 170 mm Hg.
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PMID:Supravalvular aortic stenosis in William's syndrome. 2197 93