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)

A series of 15 patients with Peters' anomaly observed from 1987-1991 and a patient showing Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome were studied retrospectively. Combined ocular anomalies were: microphthalmos (9x), myopia (4x), aniridia (2x), cataract (2x). Five of the patients had combined general anomalies: mental retardation, deafness, cardiac malformation (ASD II), and luxatio coxae. In two of them chromosomal anomalies were found: 4p minus syndrome, mosaic trisomy 9. After comparison of these data with those known from the literature the author confirms that Peters' anomaly is a morphologic finding rather than a distinct entity. Treatment depends on individual histopathologic findings and on the psychophysical development of the child.
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PMID:Peters' anomaly and combination with other malformations (series of 16 patients). 149 63

Stickler syndrome is a dominantly inherited disorder characterized by ocular and nonocular manifestations. The phenotype of the affected patients is known to be variable. Our study of 3 families and a review of the literature show that the variability is mostly interfamilial while in each family less variability is present. In one family all the patients had high myopia and most developed a retinal detachment at a young age. In the second family the major symptoms were cleft palate and characteristic facial changes in presence of mild ocular changes. In the third family, all patients had a marfanoid habitus, high myopia, and mental retardation. Interfamilial variability coupled with intrafamilial similarities in clinical manifestation may indicate that the so-called Stickler syndrome represents in fact a phenotype and not a single genetic entity.
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PMID:Variability of Stickler syndrome. 153 74

The major manifestations of the Baller-Gerold syndrome (BGS) are craniosynostosis and preaxial limb anomaly involving the radius and/or the thumb. We report on a new patient with coronal and sagittal suture involvement, mild unilateral radial and thumb hypoplasia, imperforate anus, rectovaginal fistula, prenatal onset growth deficiency, and mental retardation. This patient also had some minor oral-facial anomalies, severe nonfamilial myopia, bilateral conductive hearing loss, ureteric reflux, and skeletal anomalies other than those noted in the skull and upper limbs. This patient confirms the clinical variability among the patients and the wide pleiotropic effects of the BGS gene.
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PMID:Baller-Gerold syndrome: case report and clinical and radiological review. 153 80

Alcohol is the most frequent and most important teratogenic agent causing mental and physical retardation in childhood. The alcohol fetal syndrome is characterized by pre- and postnatal growth retardation, hypotonia, hyperactivity, microcephalus, mental retardation and typical craniofacial malformations. The latter includes short palpebral fissures, a poorly developed philtrum, thin upper lip vermillion, short mandibles, a flattened midface structure and dysplastic ears. Ophthalmological signs occur in 90% and include epicanthus, ptosis, myopia, optic nerve hypoplasia and tortuous retinal vessels. Microphthalmus, coloboma and Peters' anomaly have also been described. Five children with alcohol embryopathy are presented. The histopathological findings of the enucleated eye of a 6th child with alcohol embryopathy which was sent to us for examination and which revealed an anterior staphyloma with Peters' anomaly is also described. Ophthalmologists should be aware of alcohol in pregnancy as a preventable cause of eye malformation.
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PMID:[Eye manifestations of fetal alcohol syndrome]. 158 39

Fragile X syndrome (fra X) is one of the most significant discoveries in the area of mental retardation in the past 2 decades. Although hundreds of articles and two text-books have been written on the subject, only two studies have been published in the ophthalmic literature. This paper provides a brief review of the syndrome and reports on the ocular findings of 30 subjects with this genetic abnormality. We found that 30% of the subjects exhibited strabismus. Of those with strabismus, 70% were esotropes. Fifty-nine percent of the eyes evaluated (N = 58) showed hyperopia of +1.00 D or greater, 17% myopia of -1.00 D or greater, and 22% had at least 1.00 D of astigmatism. Major ocular health abnormalities were not identified in any of our subjects. The optometrist, as the primary eye care provider, should diagnose and treat these oculo-visual dysfunctions.
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PMID:Optometric findings in the fragile X syndrome. 192 41

We report on a female patient who had acquired total alopecia, short stature, microcephaly, optic atrophy, severe myopia, and mental retardation. A survey of published reports failed to show an identical patient, despite various similar cases.
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PMID:Acquired alopecia, mental retardation, short stature, microcephaly, and optic atrophy. 224 73

Cornelia de Lange Syndrome (CDLS) is characterized by mental retardation, growth retardation, skeletal anomalies, and a characteristic facies. We examined 22 children with CDLS to ascertain the relative frequencies of oculofacial and ophthalmologic abnormalities. We confirm prior reports of the frequent findings of brow hypertrichosis, synophrys, and long arcuate eyelashes. In addition we documented the association with ptosis, nystagmus, and high myopia. Contrary to previous reports, we did not find blue sclera or corneal, pupillary, or retinal disorders to be part of this syndrome. Hypertelorism and telecanthus were found, but they were dependent on the method of calculation. Two children had optic nerve pallor. We also report the new findings of poor macular reflex, chin lifts induced by ptosis, hypertropia, and nasolacrimal duct fistula.
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PMID:Ophthalmologic findings in the Cornelia de Lange syndrome. 234 18

Clinical features of a rare congenital myopathy, muscle-eye-brain (MEB) disease, are described in 19 patients. The pedigree data suggest an autosomal recessive inheritance. The patients presented with congenital hypotonia and muscle weakness. Serum CK was elevated, EMG was myopathic and muscle biopsy showed slight or moderate changes compatible with muscular dystrophy. Ophthalmological findings included severe visual failure and uncontrolled eye movements associated with severe myopia. The flash VEPs were exceptionally high, whereas non-corneal ERG was unrecordable. The EEG showed progressive abnormalities after the age of 6 months. Psychomotor development was slow during the first years of life, and mental retardation was severe. Most patients began to deteriorate around age 5 years. This change included spasticity and joint contractures. CT scans showed ventricular dilatations and abnormally low white matter density in several patients. Spasticity, high VEPs and ocular manifestations differentiate MEB from the Fukuyama type congenital muscular dystrophy.
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PMID:Muscle-eye-brain disease (MEB) 236 Jul 4

A 4 year old boy is reported with tyrosinase positive hypopigmentation, mental retardation, ataxia, and myopia. Radiological investigation showed occipital cerebral atrophy, coxa valga, and generalised osteoporosis. The skin histology and electron microscopy are reported and discussed. The clinical features are similar to those of the oculocerebral hypopigmentation syndrome described by Preus et al.
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PMID:An oculocerebral hypopigmentation syndrome: a case report with clinical, histochemical, and ultrastructural findings. 310 90

Initially described as incontinentia pigmenti achromians, Ito's hypomelanosis is a congenital disease characterized dermatologically by depigmented maculae arranged in a specific pattern. These maculae appear suddenly, unheralded by an inflammatory process, and are arranged on the limbs as lines and on the trunk as whirlwinds or mottled cakes. Other abnormalities, notably neurological, ophthalmic or musculoskeletal may be associated with this spray-like depigmentation of the skin. We report here three cases of this disease, which is probably more common than the scarcity of cases hitherto published would suggest. Case no. 1. A 9-year-old boy presented since the age of 5 with generalized convulsive fits predominant on the right side. Neurological examinations between fits were negative. IQ, FO and CT scans of the brain were normal. During the first months of life, the child had developed a spray-like depigmentation on the right half of his back and on the anterior and posterior aspects of his right arm. Case no. 2. A 2-year-old girl was examined for a cutaneous depigmentation which had developed when she was about 3 months' old and had progressively extended from her left knee to her left hypochondrium. Case no. 3. An 8-year-old girl presented with mental retardation and myopia, but also with a spray-like depigmentation on the left part of her chest. The skin lesion had been noticed by her parents after she had exposed herself to the sun in a tropical country. Histological examination performed in the first two patients showed some degree of hypopigmentation of the epidermis without pigmentary incontinence.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Ito's hypomelanosis. Review of the literature apropos of 3 cases]. 370 84


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