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)

Several X-linked disorders affect females disproportionately or exclusively. These including focal dermal hypoplasia, oral-facial-digital syndrome type I (ref. 3) and epilepsy with bilateral periventricular heterotopias. X-linked dominant inheritance with male lethality is probably responsible for sex-limited expression of these disorders, as affected women have frequent spontaneous abortions and the sex ratio of their live offspring is often skewed. The same inheritance pattern has been proposed for Rett syndrome, Aicardi syndrome and microphthalmia with linear skin defects, but in these sporadic conditions, evidence of male lethality is lacking. We investigated an unusual family with epilepsy and mental retardation limited to females (EFMR, #121250 in ref. 9); this disorder is transmitted both by females and by completely unaffected carrier males. Assignment of the EFMR disease locus (EFMR) to the X chromosome indicates that selective involvement of females in X-linked disease may in some instances result from male sparing rather than male lethality.
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PMID:Epilepsy and mental retardation limited to females: an X-linked dominant disorder with male sparing. 928 83

In this article, the contribution of Rudolf Happle to the understanding of X-linked skin diseases is reviewed. In 1977 he proposed functional X-chromosomal mosaicism as the genetic mechanism underlying cutaneous anomalies that were seen in a number of X-linked skin diseases such as incontinentia pigmenti or focal dermal hypoplasia. Moreover, he recognized that these cutaneous anomalies followed the lines of Blaschko and thus he could tie in the development of the lines of Blaschko with a datable embryonic event. Convincing proof for the concept of functional X-chromosomal mosaicism was later provided by his group from functional sweat studies in female carriers of the X-linked gene defect hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia showing again on the back of the patient a gross, fountain-like mosaic typical of the lines of Blaschko. Moreover, in the years 1977 to 1981 he recognized the mosaic pattern in a syndrome of chondrodysplasia punctata, linear ichthyosis, patchy cicatricial alopecia, unilateral cataracts, and short stature again as a functional X-chromosomal mosaic becoming manifest exclusively in women and proposed that this syndrome, which is today named after him, is because of an X-linked dominant gene defect. Finally, the puzzling molecular genetics of the Happle syndrome are reviewed. Most likely, the Happle syndrome gene is not lethal for hemizygously affected males but rather similar to the example of epilepsy with mental retardation limited to females, the gene actually spares male gene carriers.
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PMID:Functional X-chromosomal mosaicism of the skin: Rudolf Happle and the lines of Alfred Blaschko. 1039 52

Encephalocraniocutaneous lipomatosis, or Haberland syndrome, is a rare congenital neurocutaneous disease. It is characterized clinically by unilateral lipomatous hamartomata of the scalp, eyelid, and outer globe of the eye, ipsilateral porencephalic cysts with cortical atrophy, cranial asymmetry, marked developmental delay and mental retardation. This syndrome should be distinguished from other mosaic neurocutaneous phenotypes such as as Delleman syndrome, Schimmelpenning syndrome, Goltz syndrome, Goldenhar syndrome and Proteus syndrome. Here we report a case of Haberland syndrome with bilateral involvement which underscores the extreme heterogeneity of clinical presentation of this and related syndromes.
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PMID:Encephalocraniocutaneous lipomatosis (Haberland syndrome) with bilateral cutaneous and visceral involvement. 1282

Encephalocraniocutaneous lipomatosis (ECCL) is a sporadically occurring neurocutaneous disorder characterized by ocular anomalies, mainly choristomas; by skin lesions consisting of hairless fatty tissue nevi (nevus psiloliparus), focal dermal hypoplasia, alopecia, and periocular skin tags; and by CNS anomalies, including intracranial and spinal lipomas and often mental retardation and seizures. Here, we report on three boys with ECCL with typical abnormalities of the eyes, skin and brain and, in addition, coarctation of the aorta. All three children developed multiple cystic bone lesions, which progressively spread throughout the skeleton in Patient 1 and was shown histologically to be non-ossifying fibromas in Patient 2. We hypothesize that ECCL may be caused by mosaicism for a mutated gene involved in benign mesenchymal tumors and in vasculogenesis.
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PMID:Encephalocraniocutaneous lipomatosis accompanied by the formation of bone cysts: Harboring clues to pathogenesis? 1800 Aug 96

We present the case of a boy with a clinical diagnosis of Goltz syndrome (focal dermal hypoplasia), a rare genodermatosis characterized by widespread dysplasia of mesodermal and ectodermal tissues. A 9-year-old male patient with Goltz syndrome presented with typical skin lesions along with progressive dimness of vision and mental retardation since birth. It is inherited in an X-linked dominant fashion and is normally lethal in male patients, and so very few male patients, like the index case, have been reported.
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PMID:A case of male goltz syndrome. 2311 12