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

Several studies have shown that the incidence of cystinuria in mentally retarded populations is higher than it is in the general population. The present study found that a group of cystinurics did not differ significantly in their intelligence from their normal siblings or intelligence test norms. Since cystinuria is a heterogeneous disease, the findings of the present study could be reconciled with previous findings by supposing that only certain genotypes for cystinuria lead to mental retardation.
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PMID:Cystinuria and mental deficiency. 58 55

Urine specimens from 2,073 mentally retarded children have been analysed for their amino acid content, with the aim of determing the relationship of cystinuria and mental retardation. No children homozygous for cystinuria were identified, but 50 heterozygous children were found. This heterozygote incidence is 13 times that expected in our general population.
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PMID:Cystinuria and its relationship to mental retardation. 122 Dec 75

An unusual association of Bardet-Biedl syndrome with cystinuria was described in one patient. A 21-year-old male was admitted to hospital because of renal failure, severe deterioration of visual acuity, polydactyly, brachydactyly, and mental retardation. Laboratory investigations revealed a serum creatinine of 292 mumol/L (3.3 mg/dL) and a GFR of 25 mL/min per 1.73 m2. Quantitative ion exchange chromatography demonstrated an increased urinary excretion rate of cystine, lysine, arginine, and ornithine. The ophthalmologic examination showed a severe atypical retinal dystrophy. Visual acuity was severely deteriorated and the patient could only count the examining physician's fingers. The patient had been previously evaluated at the age of 7 years for polyuria, polydipsia, and growth failure. His workup at that time demonstrated nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, normal GFR, and a urinary amino acid pattern consistent with the cystinuric phenotype. There was mental retardation notwithstanding the normal ophthalmologic examination. Intravenous pyelography showed calyceal clubbing, calyceal cysts, and lobulated renal outlines of the fetal type. The patient was evaluated again at the age of 13 years for deterioration of visual acuity and the ophthalmologic examination showed an atypical retinal dystrophy, with sparse pigmentation, central and peripheral atrophy, attenuated vessels, and marked optic disk pallor. To our knowledge the association of Bardet-Biedl syndrome with cystinuria has never been reported. It is unlikely that cystinuria may have contributed to the kidney damage. The possibility that mental retardation has been induced or aggravated by cystinuria cannot be excluded.
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PMID:Bardet-Biedl syndrome and cystinuria. 146 12

We report cystinuria and symptoms of cerebellar atrophy in a 45-year-old man. His parents were first cousins, and many members of his family had stones of urinary tract or gait impairment. Neurological examination disclosed cerebellar signs resembling those of spinocerebellar degeneration. Urinalysis disclosed high cystine, lysine, ornitine and arginine output. Cystine was 1153.8 micro mol/day (normal range, 22-170); lysine, 3443.9 (normal range, 44-1000); ornitine, 283.8 (normal range, 7-40); and arginine, 154.0 (normal range, 9-50). Neurological complications reported to be associated with cystinuria include mental retardation, muscular dystrophy, hypotonia and dwarfism, mongolism, paroxysmal dyskinesia, myopathy, migraine, spastic paraplegia, multiple sclerosis, subacute combined degeneration and cranial polyneuropathy. Cerebellar signs have been reported in only two cases, and to our knowledge, this is the first case of cystinuria with cerebellar atrophy ever reported. Some common metabolic errors may have caused both disorders, although they also may have developed independently.
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PMID:[Cystinuria with symptoms of cerebellar atrophy--a case report]. 189 74

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

A biochemical screening programme for the detection of inherited metabolic disease was carried out on urine and blood samples from inmates of the Alexandra Institute for the mentally retarded, Cape Town. Of the 1087 patients screened, positive results for phenylketonuria were obtained in 3, for cystinuria in 2 and for Hartnup disease in 1. The overall frequency of metabolic disorders was 0,6%. It is evident that genetic metabolic disease as detected by current screening procedures makes only a small contribution to the overall burden of mental retardation.
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PMID:Biochemical screening for inherited metabolic disorders in the mentally retarded. 679 26

In 471 adult mentally retarded adult patients (mean age 46 years; 92.6% males) living in an institution for the mentally retarded, a clinical examination, cytogenetic and molecular studies were done. 306 patients were screened for metabolic disorders. In 7 additional patients a metabolic disorder (phenylketonuria (n = 5), mucopolysaccharidosis type III (Sanfilippo syndrome, type A) (n = 1) and mucopolysaccharidosis type VII (Sly syndrome) (n = 1)) was diagnosed in the past. The abnormal metabolic findings in this group of 313 patients were classified in three categories and the clinical findings are reported: 1. metabolic disorders as the cause of mental retardation (MR), 2. metabolic disorders not explaining the MR, and 3. metabolic abnormalities of unknown significance. The first two groups included 16 patients, i.e. 26.2% of the group of monogenic disorders and 3.4% of the total population: phenylketonuria (PKU) (n = 5), S-sulfocysteinuria (n = 3), mucopolysaccharidosis type III (Sanfilippo syndrome, type A) (n = 1) and Gm1-gangliosidosis type 3 (n = 1) (first group), and mucopolysaccharidosis type VII (Sly syndrome) (n = 1), Niemann-Pick syndrome, type B (n = 1), cystinuria (n = 1) and hyperprolinemia type 1 (n = 3) (second group). The third group included patients with citrullinemia (n = 2), methionine sulphoxide reductase deficiency (n = 1), ornithinemia (n = 1), glycinuria (n = 20), neuraminaciduria (n = 8), uraciluria (n = 6) and diabetes mellitus (n = 2). Screening for Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation (CDG) in 144 patients and for Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (SLO) in a selected group of 6 patients was normal. Of the total group of 306 patients screened for inborn errors of metabolism, only 5 (1.6%) were found with a true metabolic disorder. These 5 patients presented clinical symptoms, neurodegenerative or behavioural problems, indicating further metabolic screening. The present study illustrates that a selected group of patients with mental retardation of unknown origin are candidates for metabolic screening, especially if aberrant behaviour, neurodegenerative problems or dysmorphic features are present.
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PMID:Metabolic studies in older mentally retarded patients: significance of metabolic testing and correlation with the clinical phenotype. 1133 72

Genetic kidney diseases (GKDs) are an important and well-known entity in pediatric nephrology. In the past decade advances in genetic and molecular approaches have enabled elucidation of the underlying molecular defects in many of these disorders. Herein we summarize the progress that has been made over the past decade in disclosing the molecular basis of several novel GKDs, which were characterized in our area and include Bartter syndrome type IV, type II Bartter syndrome and transient neonatal hyperkalemia, cystinuria and mental retardation, familial hypomagnesemia with secondary hypocalcemia, infantile nephronophthisis, familial hemolytic uremic syndrome with factor H deficiency, and non-cystic autosomal dominant nephropathy. Retrospective analysis of our data reveals that GKDs are over-represented among the pediatric population in southern Israel. GKDs are seen four-times more often than end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and comprise 38% of all cases of ESRD in our area. This high rate of GKDs is mainly due to the high frequency of consanguineous marriages that prevails in this area. Understanding of the genetic and molecular background of these diseases is a result of a fruitful collaboration between the pediatric nephrologists and scientists, and has a direct implication on the diagnosis and treatment of the affected families.
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PMID:Genetic kidney diseases in the pediatric population of southern Israel. 1677 1

Nephrolithiasis associated with inborn metabolic diseases is a very rare condition with some common characteristics: early onset of symptoms, family history, associated tubular impairment, bilateral, multiple and recurrent stones, and association with nephrocalcinosis. The prognosis of such diseases may lead to life threatening conditions, not only because of unabated kidney damage but also because of progressive extra-renal involvement, either in a systemic form (e.g. primary hyperoxaluria type 1, requiring combined liver and kidney transplantation), or in a neurological form (Lesch-Nyhan syndrome leading to auto-mutilation and disability, phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate synthetase superactivity, which is associated with mental retardation). Patients with other inborn metabolic diseases present only with recurrent stone formation, such as cystinuria, adenine phosphoribosyl-transferase deficiency, xanthine deficiency. Finally, nephrolithiasis may be secondarily part of some other metabolic diseases, such as glycogen storage disease type 1 or inborn errors of metabolism leading to Fanconi syndrome (nephropathic cystinosis, tyrosinaemia type 1, fructose intolerance, Wilson disease, respiratory chain disorders, etc.). The diagnosis is based on highly specific investigations, including crystal identification, biochemical analyses and DNA study. The treatment of nephrolithiasis requires hydration as well as specific measures. Compliance is a major issue regarding the progression of renal damage, but the overall outcome mainly depends on extra-renal involvement in relation to the metabolic defect.
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PMID:Nephrolithiasis related to inborn metabolic diseases. 1915 44

Cystinuria is an inherited renal and intestinal disease characterized by defective amino acids reabsorption and cystine urolithiasis. It is unusually associated with neurologic symptoms. Mutations in two genes, SLC3A1 and SLC7A9, have been identified in cystinuric patients. This report presents a 13-yr-old boy with cystinuria who manifested difficulty in walking, ataxia, and mental retardation. Somatosensory evoked potential of posterior tibial nerve stimulation showed the central conduction dysfunction through the posterior column of spinal cord. He was diagnosed non-type I cystinuria by urinary amino acid analysis and oral cystine loading test. We screened him and his family for gene mutation by direct sequencing of SLC3A1 and SLC7A9 genes. In this patient, we identified new missence mutation G173R in SLC7A9 gene.
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PMID:Non-type I cystinuria associated with mental retardation and ataxia in a Korean boy with a new missence mutation(G173R) in the SLC7A9 gene. 2005 67


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