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

Two hundred and twenty-one disabled children from seven diagnostic groups have been examined with respect to height, weight and prevalence of four different feeding problems. Retarded growth and feeding problems were common in children with cerebral palsy, mental retardation, congenital heart disease and deaf-blindness, but rare in children with esophagus atresia, cystic fibrosis and epilepsy. Mean relative height and weight were significantly lower (p much less than 0.01) in children with mechanical feeding problems, such as impairment of self-feeding skills and oral-motor dysfunction, than in children without these problems, regardless of diagnostic group. Mean relative weight was also significantly lower in children with poor appetite than in children with good appetite. Feeding problems contribute to short stature and underweight in severely disabled children.
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PMID:Feeding problems, height and weight in different groups of disabled children. 183 17

Five community-based services in Israel for disabled adolescents are described. Three of them are day centers and two are afternoon clubs. They provide rehabilitation resources for teenagers with various kinds of disabilities including cerebral palsy, mental retardation, blindness, deafness and emotional handicaps. These services are analyzed and discussed with regard to addressing the major needs of adolescents with disabilities, with the aim of achieving an optimal degree of independence and preparation for normalized life. The programs include resources such as vocational rehabilitation, independent living education, recreational activities, social skills training, sexuality education in addition to creating opportunities to mix and socialize with nondisabled youth. The function of pediatric and adolescent medicine physicians in such services is emphasized as imperative in providing a comprehensive rehabilitation program for youth with disabilities.
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PMID:Developing community-based services for youth with disabilities. 183 26

We investigated the incidence rates of several neurological diseases in childhood in a suburban Tokyo area with a total population of about 130,000. The number of liveborn babies during 1985-1989 was 6,772. The number of patients with cerebral palsy (CP) was 13 and the incidence rate was 1.9/1,000, which is equal to the results of reports from several countries. Patients with severe mental and motor retardation (SMMR) was 7 and the incidence rate was 1.0/1,000. Five out of the 7 children with SMMR always needed medical care and were always or very frequently hospitalized. Prenatal brain damage played a major role in the pathogenesis of CP and SMMR. The number of patients with Down syndrome (DS) was 9 and the incidence rate was 1.3/1,000. The number of patients with mental retardation (MR) except DS was 64 and the incidence rate was 11.6/1,000. We conclude that the incidence rates of CP, DS, SMMR, and MR still remain high and that we need further strategy to prevent pediatric neurological diseases.
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PMID:[Incidence rate of cerebral palsy, severe mental and motor retardation, and mental retardation in a suburban Tokyo area]. 183 6

More than 30,000 Norwegians are mentally retarded and about 50% of them are severely retarded and often multihandicapped. Before 1975 the majority of the severely retarded resided in large institutions. New legislation has led to an increasing emphasis on decentralization and integration in local communities. Mental retardation is caused by prenatal brain damage in 90% of the cases. Chromosomal aberrations like Down and Fragile-X syndromes are the most common causes. A high proportion of individuals with autism, cerebral palsy, epilepsy and sensory defects are mentally retarded, and the most common additional diagnoses in mental retardation are speech defects, epilepsy, cerebral palsy, congenital heart disease, sight and hearing impairment and hydrocephalus. Almost 1/3 of the mentally retarded adults have developed psychiatric disturbances. Families with mentally retarded children are affected emotionally, socially and economically, and the burden increases as the mentally retarded individual grows older.
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PMID:[The mentally retarded dental patients. Who are they?]. 183 92

In 30 children suffering from severe perinatal asphyxia an attempt was made to determine the early prognostic signs of severe hypoxic-ischemic brain injury with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Ten early (1-4 days of age), 16 intermediate (2-4 weeks of age), and 38 late MRI (older than 1 month of age) procedures were performed on a 2.35 T MR-system. Severe cerebral necrosis was suspected by T2 hyperintensity of the white matter, with blurred limits to the cortex in early MRI, and was confirmed by T1 hyperintensity of the cortex in intermediate MRI. Severe cerebral necrosis was established at 3 months of age. Of the 11 children with this pattern (group A), 8 had severe and 3 had moderate cerebral palsy on subsequent examination. Thirteen children (group B) had normal late MRI scans; none developed severe cerebral palsy or marked mental retardation. Two children (group C) had focal ischemic lesions. Four children had intracranial hemorrhage (group D). Groups A and B did not differ in the severity of their perinatal histories and findings, suggesting that MRI during the first 3 months is of significant prognostic value.
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PMID:MRI following severe perinatal asphyxia: preliminary experience. 187 95

The cumulative risk of seizures and epilepsy was investigated in a prospectively identified cohort of 221 children with mental retardation (MR) born between 1951 and 1955 in Aberdeen, Scotland. By age 22 years, 33 (15%) had epilepsy. An additional 16 (7%) had had at least one seizure, but did not meet the criteria for epilepsy. The cumulative risk of epilepsy was 9, 11, 13, and 15% at 5, 10, 15, and 22 years, respectively. In children with MR and no associated disabilities, the cumulative risk of epilepsy was only 2.6, 3.2, 3.9, and 5.2% at 5, 10, 15, and 22 years. In children with MR and cerebral palsy (CP), the cumulative risk was 28, 31, and 38% at 5, 10, and 22 years. Children with a postnatal injury associated with MR had a cumulative risk of epilepsy of 53, 66, and 66% at 5, 10, and 15 years after the injury. By age 22 years, 39% had achieved 5-year seizure-free remission, including 56% of children with MR without associated disability, 47% of children with MR and CP, and 11% of children with a postnatal injury. We conclude that, in the absence of associated disability or postnatal injury, the risk of epilepsy in the retarded population is low. Epilepsy in this population also will frequently enter remission in later life.
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PMID:Epilepsy in children with mental retardation: a cohort study. 191 78

The purpose of this cohort study was to determine the incidence of and risk factors for major neurodevelopmental impairments among survivors of extreme prematurity. The study cohort comprised 100 infants born between 24 and 28 weeks of gestational age at one tertiary center from 1983 to 1984. Twenty-five infants (25%) died; 75 (75%) survived until follow-up (mean, 60 months). Standardized neurodevelopmental and psychometric assessments were performed in blind fashion on 68 of the 75 surviving children (91% follow-up). Informal assessments (parent, teacher, and physician reports) were obtained instead for seven (9%) children who had relocated outside of the area. Overall, 19 children (25%) had one or more major impairments: mental retardation, 9; cerebral palsy, 4; multiple impairments, 5; and blindness, 1. Despite a high prevalence of impairments, 95% of children (n = 71) were functionally independent [corrected]. Special educational resources were definitely necessary for seven (9%) and possibly needed for 36 (48%) additional children. Univariate analyses revealed four significant risk factors for cerebral palsy: hydrocephalus (relative risk = 12.2), grades III and IV intraventricular hemorrhage (relative risk = 5.8), 5-minute Apgar score lower than 7 (relative risk = 5.7), and bronchopulmonary dysplasia (relative risk = 5.5). Hydrocephalus was the only significant risk factor observed for mental retardation (relative risk = 5.4). Risk factors predicting a need for special education resources included sepsis (relative risk = 24.9), low socioeconomic status (relative risk = 16.3), and nonwhite race (relative risk = 3.0). Thus our data suggest that biomedical factors appear to confer the greatest risk of major impairments; sociodemographic factors appear to have a significant impact on educational risk in extremely premature infants who do not die. Continued follow-up with biomedical and developmental-social interventions appears warranted to decrease the risk of educational underachievement in this population.
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PMID:Risk factors for major neurodevelopmental impairments and need for special education resources in extremely premature infants. 191 94

In a male infant with macrocephaly and dystonic cerebral palsy glutaric aciduria type I was detected by analysis of urine for organic acids. Glutaric aciduria type I is an inherited metabolic disorder of organic acids due to a defect of glutaryl-CoA-dehydrogenase in the intermediate metabolic step of lysine and tryptophan degradation. In the urine glutaric acid is usually accompanied by 3-hydroxy-glutaric acid in abnormal quantities. The enzyme defect in our patient was proved in cultured fibroblasts. In the cerebral computer tomography marked atrophy of bilateral frontotemporal regions could be demonstrated. The amount of urinary glutarat excretion decreased after protein but especially after lysine and tryptophan restriction in the diet. The administration of carnitine improved carnitine levels in blood and urine. Although the progression of neurological impairment could be stopped, dystonia and dyskinesis remained nearly unaltered. In spite of severe motor retardation, recognition and vocalisation were established. In the two year old patient mental retardation is relatively mild comparing with motor retardation. The administration of 100 or 200 mg Riboflavin/day was stopped, as it did not alter clinical symptoms or excretion of glutarat. Baclofen, an analogue of gamma-amino-butyric acid, was orally given (2 mg/kg/day) and improved dystonia, but did not influence organic aciduria. The neurological manifestations may be due in part to inhibition of neuronal glutamat decarboxylase by glutaric acid with decreased gamma-amino-butyric acid biosynthesis. The characteristic clinical symptoms with macrocephaly and dystonia and the very typical pattern of organic acids in urine are a challenge for rapid diagnosis and therapy.
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PMID:[Macrocephaly and dystonic cerebral palsy in a child with type I glutaric aciduria]. 194 71

Cerebral hypoxia-ischemia remains a major cause of acute perinatal brain injury, leading ultimately to neurologic dysfunction manifest as cerebral palsy, mental retardation, and epilepsy. Research in experimental animals over the past 10 or more years has expanded greatly our understanding of the cellular and molecular events that occur during a hypoxic-ischemic insult to brain, and recent discoveries have suggested that metabolic perturbations arising in the recovery period after resuscitation contribute substantially to the nature and extent of neuronal destruction. The review focuses on those neurochemical processes responsible for the maintenance of cellular homeostasis and how these mechanisms fail in hypoxia-ischemia to culminate in brain damage. Knowledge of these critical events has opened new avenues of potential therapy for the fetus and newborn infant subjected to cerebral hypoxia-ischemia to prevent the serious delayed effects of perinatal brain injury.
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PMID:Experimental biology of cerebral hypoxia-ischemia: relation to perinatal brain damage. 197 36

Perinatal cerebral asphyxia, which results in significant neurologic and cognitive disabilities in infants and children, remains a major health problem. Potential neurologic sequelae include cerebral palsy, mental retardation, and epilepsy. Over the next few years, neuroprotective agents that prevent asphyxial neuronal injury and death are likely to be developed. These agents may also be effective in prophylaxis and treatment of chronic neurologic disorders, including epilepsy and neurodegenerative disorders, such as Huntington disease.
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PMID:Results of N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonists in perinatal cerebral asphyxia therapy. 198 66


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