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)

A total of 196 nonspecialty state hospitals in the U.S. each identified one patient--referred to as the hospital's "worst" recidivist--admitted to the hospital in 1987 who had the most lifetime admissions to that hospital. Persons admitted for mental retardation or substance abuse detoxification were excluded. The mean age of the recidivists was 42.2 years; their mean age at first admission was 24.7. The number of admissions per patient ranged from five to 121, with a mean of 31. Compared with the national population of state hospital admissions, significantly larger proportions of recidivists had diagnoses of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and personality disorder. More research is needed to determine actual community tenure of patients who receive revolving-door care and whether alternative approaches would be more effective.
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PMID:A report on the "worst" state hospital recidivists in the U.S. 142 98

A review is presented of the diagnosis and drug treatment of the more common psychiatric and developmental disorders in the pediatric population. Where applicable, DSM III (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Psychiatric Disorders, III) criteria are utilized to describe the behavioral syndromes. The indications for usage and appropriate dosages of antipsychotics, antidepressants, anxiolytics, stimulants, and lithium are described. Those disorders discussed are attention deficit disorder, conduct disorders, anxiety disorders, sleep disorders, schizophrenia, autism, Tourette's syndrome, mental retardation, depressive illness, manic depressive illness, eating disorders, and enuresis.
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PMID:Pharmacologic treatment of psychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders in children and adolescents (Part 1). 241 73

Schizophrenic patients in long-term care programs may not have been carefully diagnosed according to current criteria. As part of a clinical reassessment program at a state hospital, the author randomly assessed 72 patients who carried a diagnosis of schizophrenia. The diagnosis of schizophrenia by DSM-III-R criteria was confirmed in 45 patients. Various organic disorders were diagnosed in seven patients. Four patients had bipolar affective disorder, manic; one patient had schizoaffective disorder, depressed; one patient had a substance use disorder; and two had primary mental retardation or pervasive developmental disorder. Twelve patients had unclear or atypical syndromes.
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PMID:Reassessment of state hospital patients diagnosed with schizophrenia. 252 Oct 89

Thirty-six chronically psychotic patients (nine men and 27 women, mean age 56.7 +/- S.D. 13.4 years) were found to have elevated thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) levels during review of thyroid function screening tests of 1150 patients over a 15 month period in a 700 bed state mental hospital. This study population of 36 patients was more likely to be female and older than the general hospital population. The spectrum and frequency of psychiatric diagnoses included dementia (3); schizoaffective disorder (12); bipolar disorder (6); schizophrenic disorder (4); organic affective disorder (7); major depression (3); and mental retardation (1). Only nine of these 36 patients failed to receive the goitrogens lithium (LI), carbamazepine (CBZ) and/or phenytoin (PTN) and five of those nine patients had a history of thyroid disease. Sex did not predict age, thyroxine (T4) level, triiodothyronine (T3) uptake, or TSH. The distribution of psychiatric diagnoses were the same for both sexes. Expectedly, there was an inverse relationship between TSH and T4 and T3 uptake. Using T4 to separate grades 1 and 2 hypothyroidism revealed that six (17%) patients had grade 1 disease. Men were more likely to have a seizure disorder and receive LI, CBZ, and PTN. Women were more likely to have a history of thyroid disease. The goitrogenic effects of LI + CBZ seemed additive compared with patients receiving LI alone. While T4, T3 uptake, and LI levels were the same for the two groups, patients receiving LI + CBZ had higher TSH values (p = 0.028) than did patients receiving LI alone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Grades 1 and 2 hypothyroidism in a state mental hospital: risk factors and clinical findings. 310 44

De Clerembault identified a syndrome associated with delusional loving, and it has since been described in association with various diagnoses including paranoia, schizophrenia, affective disorder, and mental retardation. The authors document its coexistence with bipolar disorder and its response to lithium.
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PMID:Case report of de Clerembault syndrome, bipolar affective disorder, and response to lithium. 648 70

The amino acid profile was studied in individual random samples of urine from 1147 normal schoolchildren and 1074 exceptional children: 628 with mental retardation, 332 with hearing and speech defects and 114 with visual defects as well as in 673 patients with mental disorders. Laboratory procedures included chemical tests and one-dimension paper- electro- and column-chromatography. Phenylketonuria was found in a mentally retarded girl and in one of her brothers; iminoglycinuria in a mentally retarded boy and heterozygote cystinuria in a man with manic-depressive psychosis. The percentage of high excretors of beta-aminoisobutyric acid (B-AIB) in the controls (4.88%) was similar to previous findings in the Caucasian race. The children with hearing and speech defects showed a number of high excretors of B-AIB significantly lower (X2 = 5.32; p less than 0.025) and the children with visual defects a number of hyperglycinurias significantly higher (X2 = 9.19; p less than 0.05). Previous non-consistent findings on the excess of high excretors of B-AIB in Down's syndrome were not confirmed in this study. These results suggest a relationship between transport defects in the plasma membrane and pathological disorders in some of the cases screened.
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PMID:[Patterns of urinary aminoacid excretion in exceptional children and patients with mental disorders in Costa Rica]. 666 50

The authors studied psychic disorders in urban and rural people over 60 years of age living in old people's houses. The differences in the character of the neuropsychic disorders consisted in a prevalence of epilepsy, mental retardation, and organic disorders of various origin in old country people, and of neurotic disturbances in urban people. Equally prevalent among the inhabitants of urban and rural old people's houses were schizophrenia, manic-depressive psychosis, involutional and somatogenic psychoses, alcoholism, as well as senile and atherosclerotic dementia.
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PMID:[Comparative study of the prevalence and types of neuropsychiatric disorders in late middle-aged persons in urban and rural homes for the aged]. 731 59

Chromosomal abnormalities associated with bipolar disorder may help in the localisation of susceptibility genes for bipolar illness by pinpointing 'candidate' regions of the genome for further study using molecular genetic methods. We review descriptions of chromosomal abnormalities in association with bipolar and related affective disorders and evaluate their relevance for localising susceptibility genes for bipolar disorder, using standardised criteria. We found 28 reports. We identified four genomic regions of potential interest: 11q21-25; 15q11-13; chromosome 21;Xq28. It is important that clinicians are able to recognise patients who may have chromosome abnormalities which could help in the localisation of susceptibility genes for psychiatric disorders. We suggest referral for specialist investigation and karyotyping, to a psychiatric genetics research group, of any patient with functional psychosis and one or more of the following: (a) a strong family history of functional psychosis; (b) mental retardation; (c) another disease known to be caused by a single gene; or (d) congenital abnormalities.
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PMID:Chromosomal aberrations and bipolar affective disorder. 786 91

We report a three-generation family manifesting a previously undescribed X-linked mental retardation syndrome. Four of the six moderately retarded males have had episodes of manic-depressive psychosis. The phenotype also includes pyramidal signs, Parkinsonian features, and macroorchidism, but there are no characteristic dysmorphic facial features. Affected males do not show fragile sites at distal Xq on cytogenetic analysis, nor do they have expansions of the CGG repeats at the FRAXA, FRAXE, or FRAXF loci. Linkage analyses were undertaken, and a maximal LOD score of 3.311 at theta = .0 was observed with the microsatellite marker DXS1123 in Xq28. A recombination was detected in one of the affected males with DXS1691 (Xq28), which gives the proximal boundary of the localization. No distal recombination has been detected at any of the loci tested.
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PMID:PPM-X: a new X-linked mental retardation syndrome with psychosis, pyramidal signs, and macroorchidism maps to Xq28. 865 Dec 86

The human genome has many nucleotide repeat sequences. These range from a single repeating base to entire duplicated genes. Expansion of repeating triplets of nucleotides in the genome has recently been associated with nine degenerative and developmental neuropsychiatric diseases: fragile X syndrome, fragile X-linked mental retardation, myotonic dystrophy, Friedreich's ataxia, spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy, Huntington's disease, spinocerebellar ataxia type 1, dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy, and Machado-Joseph disease. These diseases are all conditions of the central nervous system; in all of them, the inheritance pattern usually exhibits the phenomenon of anticipation (defined as progressively earlier age of onset or a worsening disease severity over successive generations), and the severity of the phenotypic expression and penetrance appears to be related to the extent of the triplet expansion. Identification of this pathological genetic phenomenon solves several of the mysteries that surrounded these conditions but raises many important questions regarding pathogenic mechanisms that may be shared. There is some indication that triplet expansions may also underlie other neuropsychiatric conditions such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder.
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PMID:Triplet repeat gene sequences in neuropsychiatric diseases. 938 23


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