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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors presented a case of the Williams and Beuren's syndrome, special by the existence of aorta coarctation, high blood pressure, nephrotic syndrome and renal dysplasia. The Williams-Beuren's syndrome is characterised by the association of facial anomalies,
mental retardation
and supra-valvular aortic stenosis. The case presented in this study demonstrates: -- the symptomatic diversity of the Williams and Beuren's syndrome; -- and the relationship of this syndrome and severe idiopathic
hypercalcemia
of the infant. The etiopathogenesis is also discussed.
...
PMID:[Williams and Beuren's syndrome with hypertension and associated renal abnormalities (author's transl)]. 22 86
The incidence of cytoplasmic metachromasia has been studied in cultures of skin fibroblasts derived from 6 cases of the syndrome of supravalvular aortic stenosis, characteristic facies, and
mental retardation
which in many instances represents the late normocalcaemic stage of the severe form of infantile
hypercalcaemia
. The percentage of metachromatic cells (mean positivity 7.3%) was significantly higher than in control cultures. The addition of vitamin D2 and calcium to culture media caused a highly significant increase in metachromatic cells (mean positivity in supplemented media 16.1%) compared with a lesser increase in controls. These findings strengthen previous suggestions that there is a genetically determined hypersensitivity to vitamin D in some cases of the syndrome. A multifactorial aetiology is proposed, dependent on a variable genetic susceptibility of fetal connective tissues to a non-physiological effect of D vitamins and a variable level of maternal vitamin D nutrition.
...
PMID:Supravalvular aortic stenosis-infantile hypercalcaemia syndrome: in vitro hypersensitivity to vitamin D2 and calcium. 93 23
The elfin facies syndrome is characterized by idiopathic infantile
hypercalcemia
;
mental retardation
; cardiovascular anomalies, usually supravalvular aortic stenosis and peripheral pulmonary artery stenosis; a peculiar elfin facies and oral anomalies, primarily enamel hypoplasia and oligodontia. The dental features found in the three cases reported include enamel hypoplasia, severe dental decay, oligodontia, pulp stones, microdontia, and abnormally small roots. Some consistent cephalometric abnormalities were thought to contribute to the unusual facial appearance of these patients.
...
PMID:The elfin facies syndrome. 105 47
The Authors describe a case of William-Beuren Syndrome, also know as "Fanconi-Schlesinger Syndrome" or "Idiopathic
Hypercalcaemia
, supravalvular aortic stenosis, elfin facies syndrome". Irritability and chronic constipation are early features.
Hypercalcaemia
may occur in infancy but rarely after 1 year age. The facies is characteristic. Supravalvular aortic stenosis is the most frequent cardiac abnormality. Other common features are short stature,
mental retardation
and significant behavioural disorders. In this case report typical facies, short stature, behavioural disorders are associated with epilepsy in early years of life.
Hypercalcaemia
or cardiovascular malformation were not found.
...
PMID:[William-Beuren syndrome: description of a case]. 178 14
In a girl with Williams-Beuren's syndrome psychological examination revealed
mental retardation
with a special mental profile, angiography revealed peripheral pulmonary stenoses, echocardiography a slight stenosis in the supravalvular aortal area and anthropometry typical facial signs. Indirect signs of
hypercalcaemia
were clinical signs of poor progress during infancy. The authors emphasize that accurate analysis of basic clinical signs and the natural development of the disease are the key to its diagnosis.
...
PMID:[How can the Williams-Beuren syndrome be recognized?]. 222 97
Williams syndrome is characterized by peripheral artery stenosis such as supravalvular aortic stenosis, a distinctive dysmorphic facies,
mental retardation
and occasionally by transient infantile
hypercalcemia
. Twenty-five children with this syndrome underwent abdominal ultrasound examinations in our institution between 1983-1988. Five showed an increase in the renal medullary echogenicity consistent with medullary nephrocalcinosis. The echogenicity did not change with time. Two of the five had documented
hypercalcemia
in infancy. The other three did not have calcium measurements in infancy. No patient with normal serum calcium measurements during infancy developed nephrocalcinosis. Renal ultrasound may add information as to the incidence of infantile
hypercalcemia
in Williams syndrome.
...
PMID:Increased renal medullary echogenicity in patients with Williams syndrome. 267 4
The developmental anomalies of dental hard tissues are relatively common in children. These anomalies can involve separately the enamel and they are due to many factors acting during odontogenesis. The paper deals with the main ethological factors and describes a case of idiopathic
hypercalcemia
. It is normally accompanied by aortic stenosis,
mental retardation
and a characteristic elfin face. This is called Williams syndrome. In this case we only found enamel hypoplasia on the cusps of the first molars.
...
PMID:[Dental enamel hypoplasia apropos of a case]. 862 Sep 79
Williams syndrome (WS) is a multisystem developmental disorder caused by the deletion of contiguous genes at 7q11.23. Hemizygosity of the elastin (ELN) gene can account for the vascular and connective tissue abnormalities observed in WS patients, but the genes that contribute to features such as infantile
hypercalcemia
, dysmorphic facies, and
mental retardation
remain to be identified. In addition, the size of the genomic interval commonly deleted in WS patients has not been established. In this study we report the characterization of a 500-kb region that was determined to be deleted in our collection of WS patients. A detailed physical map consisting of cosmid, P1 artificial chromosomes, and yeast artificial chromosomes was constructed and used for gene isolation experiments. Using the techniques of direct cDNA selection and genomic DNA sequencing, three known genes (ELN, LIMK1, and RFC2), a novel gene (WSCR1) with homology to RNA-binding proteins, a gene with homology to restin, and four other putative transcription units were identified. LIMK1 is a protein kinase with two repeats of the LIM/double zinc finger motif, and it is highly expressed in brain. RFC2 is the 40-kDa ATP-binding subunit of replication factor C, which is known to play a role in the elongation of DNA catalyzed by DNA polymerase delta and epsilon. LIMK1 and WSCR1 may be particularly relevant when explaining cognitive defects observed in WS patients.
...
PMID:Identification of genes from a 500-kb region at 7q11.23 that is commonly deleted in Williams syndrome patients. 881 60
Williams syndrome (WS) is characterized by distinct facial changes, growth deficiency,
mental retardation
, and congenital heart defect (particularly supravalvular aortic stenosis), associated at times with infantile
hypercalcemia
. Molecular genetic studies have indicated that hemizygosity at the elastin locus (7q11.23) causes WS. The purpose of this study was to confirm that this regional deletion, involving the elastin locus, is the cause of WS in Japan, and to clarify the correlation between the phenotype and the elastin locus. Thirty-two patients with WS and thirty of their relatives were examined by fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH), using the WS chromosome region (WSCR) probe. All patients had cardiovascular disease (100%), 30 had typical WS facial changes (94%), 31 had
mental retardation
or developmental delay (97%), 16 were small-for-date at birth (50%), 14 had short stature (44%), and 13 had dental anomalies (41%). No relatives showed any manifestation of WS. Hemizygosity for a region of 7q11.23, involving the elastin locus, was found in all WS patients, but was not found in the 30 relatives.
...
PMID:Molecular cytogenetic diagnosis of Williams syndrome. 886 24
Williams syndrome (WS) is associated with a submicroscopic deletion of the elastin gene (ELN) at 7q11.23. The deletion encompasses closely linked DNA markers. We have investigated 44 patients referred for possible WS using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis with a P1 clone containing an insert from the ELN, as well as performing genotype analysis of patients and parents with four DNA polymorphisms. Twenty-four patients were found to have deletions, 19 of whom were found clinically to have typical WS. The facial features were especially characteristic. None of the patients without detectable deletions was reported to have typical WS features, although one had supravalvular aortic stenosis,
hypercalcemia
, and
mental retardation
. No evidence was found in this material for variability of the size of the deletion. Our study supports the usefulness of analysis of ELN deletion in WS patients, both for confirmation of diagnosis and for genetic counselling.
...
PMID:Investigation of deletions at 7q11.23 in 44 patients referred for Williams-Beuren syndrome, using FISH and four DNA polymorphisms. 900 95
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