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)

The Troyer syndrome was found by Cross & McKusick (1967) in 20 members of 12 Old Order Amish families in Holmes County, Ohio; it is a form of hereditary spastic paraplegia combined with distal muscle wasting, i.e. signs of involvement of lower motor neurons. The condition usually begins at 1 to 2 years and progresses at variable rates. Further manifestations include growth retardation, delayed speech development with dysarthria and drooling, and cerebellar signs; mental functions are usually not affected but severe emotional lability is a common finding. Brothers in a Wisconsin Old Order Amish family are reported with spastic diplegia, mental retardation, behavioral disorder and shortness of stature; the condition apparently is not progressive, and may be a "new" syndrome but could also represent a variant of the Troyer syndrome. Autosomal recessive inheritance is most likely, although consanguinity of the parents could not be proven. Another child in this family suffers from focal scleroderma (morphea) which is not related to the neurological syndrome.
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PMID:Familial spastic paraplegia with distal muscle wasting in the Old Order Amish; atypical Troyer syndrome or "new" syndrome. 126 Oct 70

We describe a 5-generation Hispanic family with 13 males and 1 female affected with MASA syndrome. The proposita, a 17-year-old female, and her affected male relatives shared many of the cognate manifestations--mental retardation (14/14), aphasia or delayed speech (13/13), shuffling gait (8/13), adduction of thumbs (14/14)--as well as scoliosis (2/13) and increased deep tendon reflexes in the lower extremities (10/13). Southern analysis with the polymorphic DNA probes DXS14 (Xp11), DXS72 (Xq21), and F8C (Xq28) confirmed linkage to the Xq28 region with a maximum lod score of 3.01 for this family.
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PMID:Clasped-thumb mental retardation (MASA) syndrome: confirmation of linkage to Xq28. 160 19

Linkage analysis was carried out in a large four-generation German family segregating for non-specific X-linked mental retardation. Affected males have moderate intellectual handicap. Speech delay, deviant behaviour, and hyperactivity have also been reported. Head circumference and testicular volumes are normal. Cytogenetic analysis failed to show evidence for fragile site or structural abnormality of the X chromosome. None of the obligatory carriers shows any clinical symptoms. Close linkage without recombination (lod scores 1.74 to 2.05) has been found between the disease locus (MRX1) and the polymorphic DNA loci DXS7 (Xp11.4-p11.3), MAOA (Xp11.3-p11.23), DXS255 (Xp11.22), and DXS159 (Xq12) suggesting that the gene responsible for the disease in this family maps in the pericentromeric region of the X chromosome. Linkage data obtained with the flanking marker loci OTC (Xp21.1) and DXS95 (Xq21.2-q21.3) also were compatible with this localization of the MRX1 gene. Close linkage to loci from Xp22, Xq22, Xq24-25, or Xq28 could be excluded.
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PMID:Gene for non-specific X-linked mental retardation maps in the pericentromeric region. 201 62

The charts of 101 mentally retarded children were studied to determine how their retardation first came to the attention of their pediatrician. It was found that Speech Delay, Developmental Delay, and School Failure were the three most common parental concerns. Speech Delay accounted for over 50 percent of all referrals of children age 2 to 6 years. A first step to improve accurate evaluation and treatment of mental retardation is to recognize how children ultimately diagnosed as retarded are initially brought to the attention of the pediatrician.
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PMID:Clinical aspects of mental retardation. The chief complaint. 246 Feb 77

The ultrasonographic findings and neurological development of 15 preterm infants, born between August 1981 and July 1984, who developed periventricular leukomalacia (P.V.L.) are described. The incidence of P.V.L. in infants with a birth weight less than 1 500 g was 2.3%. Nine of the 15 infants demonstrated areas of increased echogenicity in the periventricular regions prior to the development of cystic changes. The mean age for the appearance of cysts was 26 days. At follow-up 14 infants showed evidence of abnormal motor development and 8 infants had visual defects. All infants appear to have normal hearing, but 3 infants show signs of delayed speech. To date, only 2 infants demonstrate signs of mental retardation, but many of the infants are too young to assess intelligence accurately.
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PMID:Periventricular leukomalacia: ultrasonic diagnosis and neurological outcome. 352 5

Delay in language development may be associated with an underlying anatomical, neurosensory, or psychological disorder such as: deafness, cerebral palsy, cleft palate, autism, or mental retardation. A condition called specific developmental language delay may occur in children devoid of any other identifiable disorder or developmental delay. Language delay associated with early onset, severe-to-profound hearing impairment has been well documented. Controversial studies have also appeared in the communicative disorders' literature suggesting that fluctuating conductive hearing loss in early childhood can significantly affect the development of language and related academic skills. Some authors have claimed that these deleterious effects can be irreversible. This study focuses on 3 groups of preschool children, in whom hearing acuity has been documented: One group with recurrent otitis and language delay; a second group with an equally well documented otitis history but without language delay; and a third group with documented language delay in the absence of any known predisposing conditions, including early-onset, recurrent otitis media. Prenatal, birth and developmental histories of the children in each group were compared in detail to identify any factors which may enhance or ameliorate the effects of fluctuating conductive hearing loss on language development. In a population of 1864 children (ages 9-59 months) referred for otolaryngologic and/or communicative evaluation, 480 otherwise normal children (67.6% males; 32.4% females) were found to have a history of early-onset, recurrent otitis media and/or delayed speech and language development on the basis of an extensive evaluation battery. This population was further subdivided into 3 groups (I = otitis-positive/normal language; II = otitis-positive/language delay; and III = otitis-free/language delay). Among the 329 children with positive histories for early otitis media (Groups I & II), a significantly higher percentage of those demonstrating language delay were from homes in the lower socio-economic category. Race and sex showed no significant relationship to language delay among the otitis-positive groups, although males were twice as numerous as females in the over-all study population. Articulation errors on speech measures and borderline delays in other developmental milestones (standing, walking, and toilet training) were also significantly greater in the language-delayed group when compared with otitis-positive children whose language was age-appropriate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Medical profile of the language-delayed child: otitis-prone versus otitis-free. 358 81

Two sisters with similar clinical features are described. Their clinical manifestations include mental retardation, delayed speech development, low percentiles for height, weight and head circumference, dysmorphic ears, cubitus valgus, pseudoclubbing of fingers, flexion deformity of toes, small kidneys, elevated serum creatinine and blood urea nitrogen (BUN). High resolution chromosome analysis revealed a complete deletion of 16qh with a concurrent small deletion of the adjacent euchromatic segment 16q12.1 in one of the no. 16 chromosomes of both sisters, whereas the parents had normal no. 16 chromosomes. Length polymorphism of the 16qh regions appeared to indicate a maternal origin of the deleted no. 16 chromosome in both sisters. The clinical features of both sisters were attributed to the 16q12.1 deletion. Since both parents were cytogenetically normal, the two sisters were considered as a recurrence of a similar de novo interstitial deletion. Possible mechanisms which could lead to recurrence of a seemingly de novo event are discussed.
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PMID:Recurrent de novo interstitial deletion of 16q in two mentally retarded sisters. 399 93

A MEMR syndrome occurred in a 9-year-old boy with cerebral atrophy and was established by computed tomography scans of the cranium. The patient had mental retardation, delayed speech development and microcephaly, and high levels of urinary dermatan sulfate and heparin sulfate, which are characteristics of this inborn error of mucopolysaccharide metabolism.
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PMID:Multiple exostoses--mental retardation (MEMR) syndrome: report of a case. 696 47

Two siblings with different degrees of mental retardation, skeletal dysplasia, coarse facies, delayed speech, motor incoordination, recurrent respiratory infections, and immunological abnormalities, were found to have deficient alpha-mannosidase activity. Cultured skin fibroblasts in one sib were markedly deficient in alpha-mannosidase while all other lysosomal enzymes tested were within the normal range. The more severely affected sib came to autopsy and was found to have "washed-out" appearing cortical neurons and marked histiocytosis effacing lymph node architecture and partially replacing the bone marrow. The post-mortem brain and liver samples demonstrated a deficiency in alpha-mannosidase relative to the elevations of other lysosomal enzymes. Although the patterns of abnormalities in the two cases closely match those of descriptions of "type II" and "type I" mannosidosis respectively, the variation should be due to genetic modifiers or environmental effects since the brothers must have shared similar alpha-mannosidase mutations. Immunologic abnormalities present in the more severely affected sib suggest that the differential survival seen in mannosidosis types I and II may be due to differences in their immune systems.
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PMID:Mannosidosis: two brothers with different degrees of disease severity. 730 17

Whether recent advances in developmental pediatrics have influenced pediatric practice is uncertain. We interviewed, in their offices, 41 randomly selected, board-certified, primary care pediatricians in Connecticut to explore their attitudes and clinical approaches to developmental problems. Responses were compared with those from a similar survey of 97 New England pediatricians performed 15 years ago. Important changes in certain clinical approaches were found. For example, pediatricians are currently less likely to rely on history and physical examination alone to confirm a suspicion of mental retardation (p < .01) and are more likely to refer such a child for further assessment (p < .01); they are more likely to perform hearing screening in evaluating a child with delayed speech (p < .05); they are more likely to contact the school in evaluating a failing child (p < .01), and are more likely to refer such a child for further assessment (p < .01). Results indicate favorable changes in pediatricians' approaches to developmental problems and support the greater emphasis on developmental issues in pediatric education.
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PMID:Pediatricians' approaches to developmental problems: has the gap been narrowed? 751 76


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