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)

Toriello-Carey syndrome is characterized by agenesis of the corpus callosum, telecanthus, short palpebral fissures, Robin sequence, abnormal ears, cardiac anomalies, and hypotonia. We describe two patients with Toriello-Carey syndrome and call attention to an unbalanced sex ratio. The first patient, a male, was born at term by Cesarean section and manifests micrognathia, cleft soft palate, hypoplastic right ear, anotia on the left side, cerebellar vermis hypoplasia, hydrocephalus, agenesis of the corpus callosum, and hypoplastic left heart. He died 2 days after birth. The second patient is the male sib of a patient reported previously [Am J Med Genet 42: 374-376; 1992]. He had large fontanelles, telecanthus, a short nose, small and malformed ears, micrognathia, a large ventricular septal defect, and pulmonary stenosis. At age 8 months he has growth retardation and developmental delay. A sister is unaffected. Review documented eight other patients with Toriello-Carey syndrome, six of whom were male. The two female patients are less severely affected and are still alive. Of the other male patients, all are deceased except one who is still alive at age 5 years; he has severe growth retardation (-3 SD), mental retardation (DQ44), severe speech delay, and characteristic anomalies. The predominance of affected males and the milder phenotype in the female patients suggests an X-linked gene or sex influenced gene.
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PMID:Toriello-Carey syndrome: evidence for X-linked inheritance. 1056 85

We present a 17-month-old boy with the acrocallosal syndrome. He was born to consanguineous parents. Abnormal findings included agenesis of the corpus callosum, a ventricular septal defect (VSD), postaxial polydactyly of fingers, cleft soft palate, intestinal malrotation, large anterior fontanelle, prominent forehead, hypertelorism, epicanthic folds, short nose and mandible and preauricular skin tags, mixed hearing loss, laryngomalacia, and growth and severe motor and mental retardation. A review of previous reports on the acrocallosal syndrome shows considerable clinical variability; minimal diagnostic criteria are proposed. A developmental field defect with disturbance of midline development is suggested.
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PMID:Acrocallosal syndrome in an Algerian boy born to consanguineous parents: review of the literature and further delineation of the syndrome. 906 78

Familial occurrence of moyamoya disease is described in the mother and four daughters, including identical twins. Physical examination findings on admission were all normal and no mental retardation was observed. The third daughter had suffered from a ventricular septal defect when aged 6 years, but the others all had unremarkable past histories. Four of the five patients presented with transient ischemic attack as the initial symptoms, but one patient remains asymptomatic. Two patients had had repeated transient ischemic attacks. Cerebral angiography revealed either stenosis or occlusion of the intracranial portion of the bilateral internal carotid arteries associated with moyamoya vessels in all patients. The findings of moyamoya disease in a parent and four siblings including identical twins suggest that genetic factors are important in the pathogenesis of moyamoya disease.
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PMID:Familial occurrence of moyamoya disease in the mother and four daughters including identical twins. 968 18

Mental retardation and hypotonia are found in virtually all Down syndrome (DS) individuals, whereas congenital heart defects (CHDs) are only present in a subset of cases. Although there have been numerous reports of the frequency of CHDs in DS, few of the studies have had complete ascertainment of DS in a defined geographic area. The Atlanta Down Syndrome Project, a population-based study of infants born with trisomy 21, provides such a resource. In the first 6.5 years of the study, 243 trisomy 21 livebirths were identified in the five-county Atlanta area (birth prevalence: 9.6/10,000). Cardiac diagnoses were available on 227 (93%) of the cases and 89% of these evaluations were made by echocardiography, cardiac catheterization, surgery, or autopsy. Of the 227 DS infants, 44% had CHDs including 45% atrioventricular septal defect (with or without other CHDs), 35% ventricular septal defect (with or without other CHDs), 8% isolated secundum atrial septal defect, 7%, isolated persistent patent ductus arteriosus, 4% isolated tetralogy of Fallot, and 1% other. This report is unique in that it contains the largest number of trisomy 21 infants ascertained in a population-based study where modern techniques for diagnosing cardiac abnormalities predominate.
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PMID:Population-based study of congenital heart defects in Down syndrome. 1053 36

An 18-year old female with mental retardation and unexamined complex congenital heart disease received dental care under general anesthesia. Anesthesia was induced and maintained successfully without any significant hemodynamic changes with inhalation of nitrous oxide, oxygen (FIO2 0.25-0.3) and sevoflurane after a heavy premedication (morphine 10 mg, scopolamine 0.3 mg and midazolam 5 mg i.m.). After induction of anesthesia, cardiac anomaly was diagnosed by transesophageal echocardiography as TGA, VSD, PS, and operation was completed without any problem. Two points are considered important in this case; first, to appropriately estimate preoperative cardiac function and second, to adequately manage anesthesia to avoid any hemodynamic fluctuation.
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PMID:[Anesthetic management for a patient with mental retardation and unexamined complex congenital heart disease]. 1107 67

Kabuki makeup (Niikawa-Kuroki) syndrome (KS) is characterized by distinct facial anomalies, mental retardation, congenital heart defect (CHD), and skeletal malformations. In the present study we analyze cardiac characteristics and differences in sex prevalence of specific CHDs in our series of patients with KS and review published reports from the literature. Between January 1992 and February 2000, 60 patients (37 males and 23 females) with KS underwent phenotypic and cardiac evaluations at our hospital. CHD was diagnosed in 35 (58%) of our patients. Aortic coarctation (COA) (23%), atrial septal defect (ASD) (20%), and ventricular septal defect (VSD) (17%) were the most frequent CHDs in our series and in previous reports from the literature. Male preponderance was noted in patients with COA. In conclusion, CHD is a cardinal feature of KS. There is an overlap between cardiac malformations of KS and those of Turner syndrome. Male preponderance in patients with KS and COA supports the hypothesis that genes located on the X chromosome may be involved in determining KS in some patients. The high prevalence of CHD prompts accurate re-examination of patients evaluated by pediatric cardiologists in order to identify mild and still unrecognized cases of KS.
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PMID:Congenital heart defects in Kabuki syndrome. 1134 17

We performed molecular analysis of a germline interstitial deletion of chromosome 4 [del(4)(q21.22q23)], which had been observed in a male infant manifesting early-onset hepatoblastoma (HBL). The chromosomal anomaly in this child was associated with a unique congenital syndrome including HBL, atrial septal defect, ventricular septal defect, patent ductus arteriosus, mental retardation, and seizures. However, the patient did not exhibit a megalencephaly typical of 4q21-22 deletions. His HBL was associated with an increasing serum alpha-fetoprotein level and rapid growth. To define the chromosomal deletion at the molecular level in this child, we analyzed his lymphoblasts with fluorescence in situ hybridization, using as probes a panel of BAC/PAC genomic clones containing STS markers covering the 4q12-27 region. The analysis revealed that the affected chromosome had an 8-cM deletion within 4q21-q22, flanked by markers D4S2964 and D4S2966. This microdeletion overlaps with the commonly deleted region at 4q21-q22 that was recently defined in adult hepatocellular carcinomas.
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PMID:An 8-cM interstitial deletion on 4q21-q22 in DNA from an infant with hepatoblastoma overlaps with a commonly deleted region in adult liver cancers. 1156 28

The association of corneal opacity, microphthalmia, microcephaly, mental retardation, and generalized muscular spasticity with hyperglycinemia was presented for the first time by Balci and colleagues in 1974. After this report, some similar cases in the literature were referred to as Balci's syndrome. In this paper we describe a new case of Balci's syndrome, a 2.5-month-old female patient with corneal opacity, microphthalmia, microcephaly, mental retardation, and generalized muscular spacticity. All of these findings are acceptable as Balci's syndrome, and in addition she had congenital heart disease (ventricular septal defect) and renal anomalies. In this paper other syndromes associated with corneal opacity and mental retardation are discussed.
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PMID:A new case of Balci's syndrome (corneal opacity, microphthalmia, microcephaly, mental retardation, and generalized muscular spasticity associated with congenital heart disease). 1176 73

We describe a 12-year-old boy with mosaic variegated aneuploidy (MVA), subnormal response to growth hormone (GH) stimulation testing, and short stature. In addition to features more commonly described in MVA such as microcephaly, cognitive deficits, and certain facial features, he also has features not commonly reported in MVA, including short limb segments, epidermoid cysts, ventricular septal defect, and subaortic stenosis. Chromosomal analysis revealed hyperdiploid chromosome numbers ranging from 47 to 70; modal number 50, in 24% of the metaphases. This case demonstrates that although the phenotype of MVA almost always includes growth failure, microcephaly, and mental retardation, additional features may vary greatly across individuals. His clinical features and course suggest that in addition to GH deficiency, he may have an intrinsic inability of the growth plate to respond to growth hormone.
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PMID:Mosaic variegated aneuploidy with growth hormone deficiency and congenital heart defects. 1211 37

Infants with Down syndrome are known to have a high frequency of birth defects, particularly cardiac and gastrointestinal defects. Mental retardation of different degrees is common, but accompanying central nervous system malformations are rare. We report a boy born spontaneously in the 37th postconceptional week with multiple malformations: microcephaly, hypertelorism, blepharophimosis, medial cleft palate, micrognathia, omphalocele, and pathologic palmar and plantar creases. Cardial sonography revealed a ventricular septal defect and mild pulmonary stenosis. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a general but infratentorial stressed brain atrophy with widening of the inner and outer cerebrospinal fluid spaces and dysplasia of the corpus callosum. Chromosomal analysis showed a free trisomy 21. The boy had muscular hypotonia and developed severe motor and mental retardation, accompanied by microsomia and generalized epileptic seizures. At age 8 months, he died of sudden nocturnal respiratory and cardiac failure. The peculiarity of this case is the combination of Down syndrome with midline developmental defects (callosal dysplasia, medial cleft palate, omphalocele) accompanied by severe malformative encephalopathy. There are no previous reports of this combination, but there are genetic links between Down syndrome and midline defects concerning the Drosophila single-minded (sim) gene. The expression pattern of the human sim corresponding gene suggests that it might be involved in the pathogenesis of midline defects in Down syndrome.
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PMID:Midline developmental anomalies in Down syndrome. 1217 71


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