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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report on a family with an apparently X-linked neuromuscular disease. Electrophysiologic tests and electron microscopic studies are consistent with the diagnosis of hereditary motor sensory neuropathy type II (HMSN-II), one form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease. The manner of inheritance, the observation that males are severely affected from infancy, and the frequent association of
deafness
and/or
mental retardation
with the neuromuscular disorder are not usual for HMSN-II and suggest that this family may have a previously undescribed genetic disorder. The peripheral neuropathy did not appear to be linked to the Xg blood group. Minor abnormalities of sensory nerve conduction, electromyography, and hearing were separately identified in female relatives in this family, but were not consistent enough to be useful in the identification of carriers for this gene.
...
PMID:X-linked motor-sensory neuropathy type-II with deafness and mental retardation: a new disorder. 385 85
In 1814, George Maton, first recognized that a mild illness characterized by rash, adenopathy, and little or no fever was a discrete entity. Henry Veale, in 1866, named the disease rubella. The illness attracted little attention until 1942, when Norman Gregg noticed that first-trimester maternal rubella caused serious birth defects. The full spectrum and impact of rubella embryopathy remained unclarified until rubella virus was isolated in tissue culture in 1962 by two independent groups: Parkman, Buescher, and Artenstein; and Neva and Weller. Using the new tools of the virus laboratory, many investigators concentrated on the consequences of a severe rubella epidemic in 1964, which affected approximately 1% of pregnancies. Newly recognized transient manifestations of congenital rubella infection (CRI) include neonatal thrombocytopenic purpura, hepatitis, bone lesions, and meningoencephalitis and late-emerging sequelae such as diabetes mellitus and progressive rubella panencephalitis added to the cataract, heart disease,
mental retardation
, and
deafness
previously defined as due to CRI. Sharp contrasts were documented between the patterns of virus excretion and immune response of postnatal vs. congenital rubella. Licensure and widespread distribution of attenuated rubella virus vaccines in 1969 have prevented epidemic rubella. Pockets of illness remain, even in the United States. Continued effort will be required to eliminate the rubella problem.
...
PMID:The history and medical consequences of rubella. 389 Jan 5
This article reviews several autosomal recessive syndromes characterized by pigmentary retinopathy and, in many, combined with
deafness
, hypogonadism, and/or
mental retardation
. These syndromes are manifested in infancy and childhood. Although no specific treatment is available, an early diagnosis can be the first step in initiating symptomative management and preventive measures for the patient and family.
...
PMID:Seven hereditary syndromes with pigmentary retinopathy. A review and differential diagnosis. 389 11
This paper contains abstracts from publications of the late Sir Norman McAlister Gregg, published in 1941 and 1944, in which he demonstrated the association between rubella in pregnancy and defects in the baby. Besides cataract and retinopathy with which ophthalmologists are familiar, there occur
deafness
, deafmutism, cardiac defects,
mental retardation
, pulmonary and renal abnormalities and diabetes.
...
PMID:Congenital cataract following German measles in the mother. Abstracts from the publications of the late Sir Norman McAlister Gregg. 390 70
Two sibships, each with two affected males but no other affected family members, are described. All four patients at birth had small eyes with white masses visible behind clear lenses. Support for a diagnosis of Norrie's disease lies in the probable
mental retardation
and sudden death of one child and
mental retardation
in the other in one of the families, and strong support in the sensorineural
deafness
in one child in the other family. A necropsy was performed on the dead child. Both eyes showed the retinae to be totally non-attached. The optic nerves were thin. If the diagnosis is Norrie's disease (highly probable), the birth of the second affected child in each family supports the postulate of a mutation in the X chromosome of a germ cell of a maternal grandparent or an earlier maternal ancestor, no previous member of the family having been affected. That implies a 50% risk of the disease in future male siblings and a 50% risk of the carrier state in female sibs. When only one child is affected, the explanation could also be a mutation in that individual. Given Norrie's disease, we have calculated a mutation rate of 3.9 per million chromosomes in the Scottish population--remarkably similar to the mutation rates calculated for many dominant diseases. A diagnosis of autosomal recessive non-attachment of retina implies a 25% risk to later siblings.
...
PMID:Probably Norrie's disease due to mutation. Two sporadic sibships of two males each, a necropsy of one case, and, given Norrie's disease, a calculation of the gene mutation frequency. 396 31
Norrie's disease, or congenital progressive oculo-acoustico-cerebral degeneration, is a rare X-linked recessive syndrome of retinal malformation,
deafness
, and
mental retardation
and/or deterioration. The natural history of the disorder in two families with five affected males, four living and one deceased, is described. The histopathology of two patients, one from each family, is reported. Differential diagnosis, treatment, and genetic counseling are discussed.
...
PMID:Norrie's disease: a study of two families. 406 10
The proband and two maternal uncles were similarly affected by a unique constellation of
mental retardation
and physical abnormalities. There were severe retardation, growth less than the third percentile, and significantly delayed bone age. They manifested
deafness
, a flat nasal bridge, several ocular abnormalities, and a rudimentary scrotum with cryptorchidism, and one had a small penis. The proband also had onychodystrophy of his fingers and toes. Their birth weights and lengths were less than expected. No chromosomal or biochemical abnormality was detected. Both uncles died, but the proband is healthy at 4 years. Their phenotype is distinguished from other forms of X-linked
mental retardation
and appears to be a new syndrome.
...
PMID:A new form of X-linked mental retardation with growth retardation, deafness, and microgenitalism. 610 45
We report 21 patients with choanal atresia or ocular coloboma or both who have certain other associated anomalies, including congenital heart disease, postnatal growth deficiency,
mental retardation
and/or CNS anomalies, microphallus and cryptorchidism, and ear anomalies and/or
deafness
. Facial palsy, micrognathia, cleft palate, and swallowing difficulties were also common. It has not been possible to define a single etiology or a syndrome in these patients. We propose the mnemonic CHARGE (C-coloboma, H-heart disease, A-atresia choanae, R-retarded growth and retarded development and/or CNS anomalies, G-genital hypoplasia, and E-ear anomalies and/or
deafness
) to describe the features of this association.
...
PMID:Coloboma, congenital heart disease, and choanal atresia with multiple anomalies: CHARGE association. 616 37
Three cases of phytanic acid storage disease with symptoms during the first months of life are reported. Hepatomegaly, facial dysmorphia, growth and/or
mental retardation
and osteopenia were observed in addition to retinitis pigmentosa and neurosensory
deafness
. The presence of phytanic acid in serum (160-320 mumol/1 (50-100 micrograms/ml)) was accompanied by hypocholesterolaemia. Electron microscopy showed that a storage material had accumulated in mesenchymal and parenchymal liver cells. Lamellar structures were seen in hepatocytes and other storing cells. These inclusions resembled the structures found in plant chloroplasts containing phytol. Some of the clinical and biological data obtained were consistent with Refsum's disease. However, other characteristics such as
mental retardation
, hepatomegaly, osteopenia, hypocholesterolaemia and hypoalphalipoproteinaemia, as well as the ultrastructural findings in the liver, suggested that our patients' illness was either a phytanic acid storage disease different from the classical form of Refsum's disease, or a more severe early symptomatic form of Refsum's disease. Early diagnosis by phytanic acid assay and electron microscopic liver examination calls for prescription of a low phytanate diet in the hope of improving the child's condition.
...
PMID:Infantile phytanic acid storage disease, a possible variant of Refsum's disease: three cases, including ultrastructural studies of the liver. 618 82
Two patients with Multiple Lentiginosis (ML) had hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with severe obstruction of the right and left ventricular outflow tracts. ML is a rare syndrome in which there is a typical skin pigmentation disorder together with various other abnormalities like slight
mental retardation
, sensorineural
deafness
, genital and skeletal anomalies and sometimes a characteristic facies. Obstruction of the right ventricular outflow tract is frequent in such patients. The association of ML and obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy has been recently reported. A critical examination of the literature in addition to our clinical observations suggests that the biventricular obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy may play a major role in the clinical feature of ML syndrome.
...
PMID:[Multiple lentiginosis and hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy]. 622 88
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