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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Five cases from two nonrelated families with partial trisomy 10q due to a reciprocal translocation t(10;17)(q25;
p13
) and t(10;11)(q24;q23), respectively, are reported. The phenotypic findings are compared with those of 17 previously published cases; the clinical data justify the conclusion that cases with trisomy 10q show a specific syndrome of
mental retardation
and malformation characterized by psychomotor retardation, growth retardation, hypotonia, high forehead, flat face, fine and arched eyebrows, antimongoloid slant of the eyes, narrow palpebral fissures, hypertelorism, short nose, bow-shaped mouth, short neck (kypho)scoliosis, and in some cases microcephaly.
...
PMID:Partial trisomy 10q: a recognizable syndrome. 42 4
Description of a boy aged 20 months presenting growth and
mental retardation
as well as several minor anomalies : brachycephaly, antimongoloid slant of the palpebral fissures, dystopia canthorum, broad nose, low set ears and short fingers. Chromosome analysis revealed an abnormal No. 15 with duplication of the distal half segment of its long arm (q22 leads to qter) and deficiency of the distal band of its short arm (
p13
). This anomaly was inherited by recombination aneusomy of a pericentric inversion carried by his mother : inv(15) (p12;q22).
...
PMID:Inherited parital duplication deficiency of chromosome 15 (p12;q22). 73 60
A cytogenetic survey was carried out on 200 patients with
mental retardation
and multiple congenital anomalies, and on 200 normal adult controls. Patients with a known syndrome were excluded from the survey. Chromosome analyses were carried out on 'blind-coded' slides using the ASG banding technique as the routine stain. After the initial analyses (at least 15 cells per person) the slides were decoded, destained and reused for C and Q band polymorphism studies. Five major chromosome abnormalities were detected in the patient group during the survey. They included three patients with de novo, apparently balanced, reciprocal translocations, karyotypes 46,XY,rcp(3;16)(q21;p12); 46,XX,rcp(5;8)(p15;q22); and 46,XX,rcp(5;12)(p11;q24); one with karyotype 47,XX,+mar and one with karyotype 46,XX,der(13),t(13;?)(q34;?). One additional patient whose karyotype in lymphocytes was 46,XX,inv(9)(p11;q13) was found to have a mosaic karyotype 46,XX,inv(9)(p11;q13)/46,XX,inv(9) (p11;q13), der(12),t(12;?)
p13
;?) in cultured skin fibroblasts. None of the 200 controls had a major chromosome abnormality. From the combined results of this and previous surveys it is now apparent that about 6.2% of the unclassifiable mentally retarded patients with three or more congenital anomalies and about 0.7% of the controls reveal major chromosome abnormalities.
...
PMID:A cytogenetic survey of 200 unclassifiable mentally retarded children with congenital anomalies and 200 normal controls. 88 53
A 5-year-old boy with multiple minor anomalies and
mental retardation
was found to have chromosomal condition of 46,XY,inv dup(9p) (pter leads to
p13
::p21 leads to p24::
p13
leads to qter). The clinical features of the propositus fit well with those of trisomy 9p which have been established to be a clinical entity.
...
PMID:Possible intrachromosomal duplication in a case of trisomy 9p. 100 45
A clinical and cytogenetic investigation carried out in a special institution for mentally retarded patients revealed 82 cases of oligophrenia, amongst whom were found 56 normal karyotypes (68.3%). Out of 25 karyotypes with chromosome anomalies or variants there were 18 cases of trisomy 21 and 7 others: one case of mosaicism with balanced translocation, 46,XX/46,XX,6p+,17q-; one case of partial trisomy, 46,XX,11q+; one case of pericentric inversion, 46,XY,inv(1) (
p13
,q21); one case with 8% chromosome breaks; three cases of marker chromosomes, of which one was of karyotype 46,XX,1qh+, and two (oligophrenic sisters) 46,XX,21p+. Moreover, there was an interesting case of testicular feminisation in a 9-year-old girl with karyotype 46,XY. The authors' results corroborate those obtained in several important previous studies based on much larger numbers of patients. Amongst the 56 cases where the karyotype was shown to be normal, there were 15 for whom a probably exogenic cause of the oligophrenia could be established, occurring mainly during the perinatal period. The authors were also able to confirm that the genetic factor plays an important role in the incidence of
mental retardation
, since in 22 examined patients, i.e. 26.8% of all cases, the condition was of familial type. Some interesting observations of idiopathic oligophrenia are reported, as well as several cases with well-known syndromes (Crouzon's and Cornelia de Lange's syndromes, hypothyroidism). Two cases of incest between father and daughter, which had produced children with serious oligophrenia associated, in one case, with deaf-mutism, microphthalmia, microcephaly and sclerocornea, are also discussed. The data show that
mental retardation
can frequently have a genetic cause, either of mendelian, chromosomal or multifactorial origin.
...
PMID:[A clinical and cytogenetic investigation carried out in a special institution for mentally retarded patients: preliminary results concerning 82 cases of oligophrenia (author's transl)]. 102 53
We report on a 3-generation family with an interstitial deletion of the short arm of chromosome 5. Varied manifestations were found among the affected individuals including microcephaly, hypertonia, and micrognathia;
mental retardation
was common to all affected individuals. High resolution chromosome analysis was interpreted as del(5) (pter- > p14.3::
p13
.3- > qter). Molecular comparison of the deletion in this family with individuals with other 5p deletions suggests that the clinical findings are due specifically to the chromosomal material deleted from 5p13.
...
PMID:Clinical phenotype and molecular analysis of a three-generation family with an interstitial deletion of the short arm of chromosome 5. 148 85
We describe a girl with typical Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome with apparently balanced reciprocal translocation between chromosome 2 and 16. The patient has a condition characterized by
mental retardation
, typical facial manifestations, broad thumbs and first toes. Cytogenetic studies of the patient showed a reciprocal translocation without visible deletion, karyotype: 46,XX, t(2;16)(
p13
.3;
p13
.3). Her parents had normal chromosomes. These results suggest that the locus of the gene for the Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome may be situated at 2p13.3 or 16p13.3.
...
PMID:Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome with de novo reciprocal translocation t(2;16)(p13.3;p13.3). 206 11
We describe a family in whom the phenotypically normal father carries a balanced insertional translocation, ins(14;11)(q23;p12p14). This individual fathered three mentally retarded children, two with a del(11)(
p13
) and one with a dup(11)(
p13
). Two other cases of a de novo del(11)(
p13
) are also described. All four del(11)(
p13
) cases presented with WAGR, a complex syndrome associated with a predisposition to Wilms' tumor (WT), aniridia (A), genitourinary abnormalities (G), and
mental retardation
(R). Using an approach combining karyotype analysis, determination of the gene copy number, and RFLP studies employing five 11p13 DNA markers, we were able to define the chromosomal rearrangement involved in each case. Analysis of these WAGR deletions provides further subdivision of band
p13
on chromosome 11.
...
PMID:Molecular definition of de novo and genetically transmitted WAGR-associated rearrangements of 11p13. 257 Jun 77
Children with constitutional deletions of chromosome 11p13 suffer from aniridia, genitourinary malformations, and
mental retardation
and are predisposed to develop bilateral Wilms tumor (the WAGR syndrome). The critical region for these defects has been narrowed to a segment of band 11p13 between the catalase and the beta-follicle-stimulating hormone genes. In this report, we have cloned the endpoints from a WAGR patient whose large cytogenetic deletion, del(11)(p14.3::
p13
), does not include the catalase gene. The deletion was characterized using DNA polymorphisms and found to originate in the paternally derived chromosome 11. The distal endpoint was identified as a rearrangement of locus D11S21 in conventional Southern blots of the patient's genomic DNA, but was not detected in leukocyte DNA from either parent or in sperm DNA from the father. The proximal endpoint was isolated by cloning the junction fragment and was mapped in relation to other markers and breakpoints. It defines a new locus in 11p13-delta J, which is close to the Wilms tumor gene and the breakpoint cluster region (TCL2) of the frequent t(11;14)(
p13
;q11) translocation in acute T-cell leukemia. An unusual concentration of base pair substitutions was discovered at delta J, in which 9 of 44 restriction sites tested (greater than 20%) vary in the population. This property makes delta J one of the most polymorphic loci on chromosome 11 and may reflect an underlying instability that contributed to the original mutation. The breakpoint extends the genetic map of this region and provides a useful marker for linkage studies and the analysis of allelic segregation in tumor cells.
...
PMID:A highly polymorphic locus cloned from the breakpoint of a chromosome 11p13 deletion associated with the WAGR syndrome. 257 49
We describe a patient with ambiguous genitalia, gonadoblastoma, aniridia,
mental retardation
and 46XY, del (11)(
p13
) karyotype. To our knowledge this association has been observed in only 2 patients to date.
...
PMID:Ambiguous genitalia, gonadoblastoma, aniridia and mental retardation with deletion of chromosome 11. 281 May 12
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