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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hemimegalencephaly (HME) is an uncommon sporadic nonfamilial congenital dysplastic abnormality of the central nervous system, characterized by enlargement of one cerebral hemisphere, with cranial asymmetry, hemiparesis, epilepsy, and
mental retardation
. It can occur in isolation or associated with various anomalies, namely skin disorders. The main neuropathologic findings are hemispheric gigantism, macro- and/or micropolygyria, cortical thickening with lack of lamination, blurred boundaries of the gray and white matter, and large ortho- and heterotopic neural cells. The results obtained by morphological investigations carried out on six patients with HME, compared with the findings recorded in similar studies performed on one patient with
tuberous sclerosis
(TS) and another with pachygyria, allow the authors to (a) confirm the dysplastic nature of HME and its autonomy from TS; (b) demonstrate that ortho- and heterotopic neuronal cells do not differentiate completely during proliferation and migration from the germinal matrix; (c) document, by means of flow cytometric study, a normal euploid DNA content in the enlarged hemisphere, consequently ruling out heteroploidy as a cause of both cell "hypertrophy" and enlargement of the malformed cerebral hemisphere.
...
PMID:Hemimegalencephaly. Histological, immunohistochemical, ultrastructural and cytofluorimetric study of six patients. 911 45
The authors describe clinical course of
tuberous sclerosis
in seven family members from two pedigrees. They stress the importance of careful medical anamnesis and skin examination in family members of persons affected with
tuberous sclerosis
. It is pointed out that in contrast to widespread stereotype of a patient with
tuberous sclerosis
-a person with epilepsy,
mental retardation
and multiple skin and organ involvement, much more common than it was previously thought, the course of the disease may be oligosymptomatic and the affected person may properly function in society. All 7 affected persons presented in the paper were mentally normal and only two of them suffered from epilepsy.
...
PMID:[Oligosymptomatic presentation of tuberous sclerosis in two pedigrees]. 917 31
Tuberous sclerosis
(TS) is an autosomal dominant disorder in which affected individuals manifest
mental retardation
, seizures, and a variety of benign and malignant tumors. The TSC2 tumor suppressor gene was recently identified by positional cloning and its protein product, tuberin, shown to represent one member of the rap GTPase activating protein (rapGAP) family. In order to determine the contribution of tuberin to the development of
mental retardation
and seizures in patients with TS, we examined the expression of tuberin in adult and developing nervous system tissues. Since tuberin is the second rapGAP found in the nervous system, the expression of tuberin was compared to the expression of rapGAP, rap1, and rap2. In this study, we demonstrate that tuberin is expressed at greatest levels in the spinal cord and cerebellum as opposed to rapGAP, which is not enriched in these tissues. Tuberin expression in the adult CNS is restricted to the olfactory bulb, several CNS neuronal populations, brainstem nuclei, cerebellar Purkinje cells, and motor neurons in the ventral spinal cord. In contrast, rapGAP is expressed in many different cell types in the adult CNS, but not in cerebellar Purkinje cells or motor neurons in the ventral spinal cord. However, there is significant expression of rapGAP in astrocytes. The restricted distribution of tuberin expression relative to rap1 and rapGAP suggests that tuberin may be the primary rap1 regulator in a subpopulation of CNS neurons.
...
PMID:Expression of the tuberous sclerosis 2 gene product, tuberin, in adult and developing nervous system tissues. 917 18
Tuberous sclerosis
is a hamartoneoplastic syndrome characterised by early onset of convulsive seizures with
mental retardation
. Oral abnormalities, including enamel hypoplasia and mucosal fibromas, have been previously reported. We report here a 17-year-old girl with this disorder who had received repeated dental trauma. She presented with a swelling associated with a traumatised maxillary central incisor that suggested a diagnosis other than the odontogenic myxoma found at operation. Odontogenic myxoma has not previously been reported in this condition; it may represent an unusual phenotypic expression of the genetic defect understood to determine
tuberous sclerosis
, or it may be an unrelated coincidental finding.
...
PMID:Odontogenic myxoma in an adolescent with tuberous sclerosis. 925 Sep 35
Tuberous sclerosis
(
TSC
) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterised by the development of hamartomatous growths in many organs. Sixty to seventy percent of cases are sporadic and appear to represent new mutations.
TSC
exhibits locus heterogeneity: the TSC2 gene is located at 16p13.3 whilst the TSC1 gene, predicted to encode a novel protein termed hamartin, has recently been cloned from 9q34. With the exception of a contiguous gene deletion syndrome involving TSC2 and PKD1 , TSC1 and TSC2 phenotypes have been considered identical. We have now comprehensively defined the TSC1 mutational spectrum in 171 sequentially ascertained, unrelated
TSC
patients by single strand conformation polymorphism and heteroduplex analysis of all 21 coding exons, and by assaying a restriction fragment spanning the whole locus. Mutations were identified in 9/24 familial cases, but in only 13/147 sporadic cases. In contrast, a limited screen revealed TSC2 mutations in two of the familial cases and in 45 of the sporadic cases. Thus TSC1 mutations were significantly under-represented among sporadic cases (Fisher's exact p -value = 3.12 x 10(-4)). Both large deletions and missense mutations were common at the TSC2 locus whereas most TSC1 mutations were small truncating lesions.
Mental retardation
was significantly less frequent among carriers of TSC1 than TSC2 mutations (odds ratio 5.54 for sporadic cases only, 6.78 +/- 1.54 when a single randomly selected patient per multigeneration family was also included). No correlation between
mental retardation
and the type of mutation was found. We conclude that there is a reduced risk of
mental retardation
in TSC1 as opposed to TSC2 disease and that consequent ascertainment bias, at least in part, explains the relative paucity of TSC1 mutations in sporadic
TSC
.
...
PMID:Molecular genetic and phenotypic analysis reveals differences between TSC1 and TSC2 associated familial and sporadic tuberous sclerosis. 932 81
Tuberous sclerosis
complex (TSC) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by seizures,
mental retardation
, and tumors of skin, brain, heart, and kidney. In this study, we focused on two of the most frequent tumors in TSC patients, renal angiomyolipomas and subependymal giant cell astrocytomas (SEGAs). Two questions were addressed. First, is loss of tuberin, the product of the TSC2 gene, seen in both renal and central nervous system tumors from TSC patients? Second, when loss of tuberin occurs, does it affect each of the cell types seen in these tumors? We used a loss of heterozygosity approach to identify tumors from TSC2 patients. We found loss of tuberin immunostaining in the spindle and epithelioid cells but not in the giant cells of six TSC2 SEGAs. We also found loss of tuberin immunostaining in all three cell types (smooth muscle, fat, and vessels) of six TSC2 angiomyolipomas. Chromosome 16p13 loss of heterozygosity occurred in both spindle and epithelioid cells of a SEGA and in smooth muscle and fat but not the vessels of two angiomyolipomas. These results support a two-hit tumor suppressor model for the pathogenesis of SEGAs and angiomyolipomas. The vascular elements of angiomyolipomas and the giant cells of SEGAs may be reactive rather than neoplastic.
...
PMID:Loss of tuberin in both subependymal giant cell astrocytomas and angiomyolipomas supports a two-hit model for the pathogenesis of tuberous sclerosis tumors. 940 14
We describe a woman with a probable autosomal recessive ectodermal dysplasia with corkscrew hairs and
mental retardation
in a family with
tuberous sclerosis
. Other findings included syndactyly, typical facies, dental abnormalities, dermatoglyphic hypoplasia, epidermal ridge sweat pore count slightly below normal, and keratosis pilaris. Clinical studies and genetic analysis excluded the diagnosis of
tuberous sclerosis
in our patient. We conclude that she has ectodermal dysplasia associated with
mental retardation
. This association has been described previously; it suggests the possible interrelationship of a community of ectodermal dysplasia syndromes with a distinctive structural hair abnormality (pili torti et canaliculi), variable midfacial malformations, limb defects, and other features such as
mental retardation
. The similarity of our patient to that described by Whiting et al. and Abramovits-Ackerman et al. suggests the autonomy of this syndrome.
...
PMID:A case of probable autosomal recessive ectodermal dysplasia with corkscrew hairs and mental retardation in a family with tuberous sclerosis. 948 13
Lymphangiomyomatosis (LAM) is a rare disease, of unknown etiology, affecting women almost exclusively. Lung transplantation is the only consistently effective therapy for LAM. Microscopically, LAM consists of a diffuse proliferation of smooth muscle cells. LAM can occur without evidence of other disease (referred to as "sporadic LAM") or in association with
tuberous sclerosis complex
(
TSC
).
TSC
is an autosomal dominant tumor suppressor gene syndrome characterized by seizures,
mental retardation
, and tumors in the brain, heart, skin, and kidney. Renal angiomyolipomas occur in approximately 50% of sporadic LAM patients and in 70% of
TSC
patients. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in the chromosomal region for the TSC2 gene occurs in 60% of
TSC
-associated angiomyolipomas. Because of the similar pulmonary and renal manifestations of
TSC
and sporadic LAM, we hypothesized that LAM and
TSC
have a common genetic basis. We analyzed renal angiomyolipomas, from 13 women with sporadic LAM, for LOH in the regions of the TSC1 (chromosome 9q34) and TSC2 (chromosome 16p13) genes. TSC2 LOH was detected in seven (54%) of the angiomyolipomas. We also found TSC2 LOH in four lymph nodes from a woman with retroperitoneal LAM. No TSC1 LOH was found. Our findings indicate that the TSC2 gene may be involved in the pathogenesis of sporadic LAM. However, genetic transmission of LAM has not been reported. Women with LAM may have low-penetrance germ-line TSC2 mutations, or they may be mosaic, with TSC2 mutations in the lung and the kidney but not in other organs.
...
PMID:Evidence that lymphangiomyomatosis is caused by TSC2 mutations: chromosome 16p13 loss of heterozygosity in angiomyolipomas and lymph nodes from women with lymphangiomyomatosis. 952 62
Tuberous sclerosis
complex (TSC) is an autosomal-dominant disorder characterized by
mental retardation
, seizures, and central nervous system and visceral hamartomas. Pulmonary involvement manifesting as lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) occurs in 1% of patients (all women) with TSC. Micronodular pneumocyte hyperplasia also has been described as a rare pulmonary manifestation of TSC. We report 14 patients with micronodular pneumocyte hyperplasia (MNPH). The patients ranged in age from 23 to 57 years (mean 37.5). There were 12 women and 2 men. Nine of the patients (one man and eight women) had documented clinical manifestations of TSC: seven with LAM, two without LAM (including one man). Of the five patients who did not have TSC, three had LAM and two did not (including one man). Histologically, all 14 cases demonstrated multiple well-demarcated nodules usually measuring up to 8 mm in size, but most were 1-3 mm. The nodules were produced by a proliferation of enlarged cytologically benign type II pneumocytes, with an associated increase in alveolar macrophages and interstitial reticulin. Immunoperoxidase studies showed the type II pneumocytes within lesions to be reactive with antibodies to cytokeratin (four of four), epithelial membrane antigen (EMA) (five of five), and surfactant apoprotein B (8 of 10). HMB-45 was negative in the MNPH lesions in all nine cases studied. Follow-up was available in 9 of 10 living patients and ranged from 1 to 14 years (mean 6 years). Nine patients are alive; six are clinically stable and three have repeated pneumothoraces related to LAM. Four patients have died. None of the deaths were attributable to MNPH. MNPH appears to be a hamartomatous proliferation occurring most frequently in patients with
tuberous sclerosis
, is separable from and not a manifestation of LAM, has been observed to occur in men, and, like other hamartomas of
tuberous sclerosis
, does not appear to possess malignant potential.
...
PMID:Micronodular pneumocyte hyperplasia. 953 75
Tuberous sclerosis
(
TSC
) is an autosomal dominant disorder caused by a mutation in either the TSC1 or TSC2 tumour suppressor gene. The disease is characterized by a broad phenotypic spectrum that can include seizures,
mental retardation
, renal dysfunction and dermatological abnormalities. TSC2 encodes tuberin, a putative GTPase activating protein for rap1 and rab5. The TSC1 gene was recently identified and codes for hamartin, a novel protein with no significant homology to tuberin or any other known vertebrate protein. Here, we show that hamartin and tuberin associate physically in vivo and that the interaction is mediated by predicted coiled-coil domains. Our data suggest that hamartin and tuberin function in the same complex rather than in separate pathways.
...
PMID:Interaction between hamartin and tuberin, the TSC1 and TSC2 gene products. 958 Jun 71
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