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)

Alexander's disease is a progressive degenerative neurological disorder developing in early childhood which is characterized by accumulation of Rosenthal fibres throughout the cerebral white matter. These fibres are composed of glial fibrillary acidic protein and ubiquinated alpha beta crystallin. The absence of atypia, increased cellularity, mitotic activity or necrosis in biopsy material allows differentiation from neoplasia glial processes. Clinical features suggestive of the diagnosis include progressive mental retardation with an increase in head circumference.
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PMID:Test and teach. Number seventy-three. Diagnosis: Alexander's disease. 826 44

We describe 2 new cases of Alexander's disease, the first to be reported in Belgium. The first patient, a 4-year-old girl, presented with progressive megalencephaly, mental retardation, spastic tetraparesis, ataxia and epilepsy: post-mortem examination showed widespread myelin loss with Rosenthal fibers (RFs) accumulation throughout the neuraxis. She was the third of heterozygotic twins, the 2 others having developed normally and being alive at age 5 years. The second patient developed at age 10 years and over a decade spastic paraparesis, palatal myoclonus, nystagmus, thoracic hyperkyphosis and thoraco-lumbar scoliosis with radiological findings of bilateral anterior leukoencephalopathy. Brain stereotactic biopsy at age 16 years demonstrated numerous RFs. With these 2 cases, we review the literature on the various clinico-pathological conditions reported as Alexander's disease. We discuss the nosology of this entity and the pathogeny of RFs formation and dysmyelination. Clues to the diagnosis of this encephalopathy in the living patient are briefly described.
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PMID:Infantile and juvenile presentations of Alexander's disease: a report of two cases. 1010 Sep 59

Alexander disease is a rare, degenerative disorder of the central nervous system. It is characterized clinically by spasticity, seizures, dementia, loss of developmental milestones, and macrocephaly. Here we describe a 13-year-old boy with Alexander disease and severe scoliosis. The patient initially presented at 9 months of age, with profound mental retardation and a history of seizures. When he was 7 years old, a pediatrician had diagnosed Alexander disease (hypotonia, macrocephaly, and progressive low-density white matter predominantly in the frontal region on computed tomography examination). From the age of 10, thoracolumbar scoliosis had gradually become severe. Because treatment using a corrective brace would have produced major problems because of the patient's mental retardation, the scoliosis was successfully treated surgically, by careful posterior spinal fusion with instrumentation, and an autologous iliac crest bone graft. A 64 degrees curve was corrected to 18 degrees (72% correction). Scoliosis with Alexander disease is considered to be very rare because patients with the disease seldom survive long enough to develop spinal deformities.
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PMID:Scoliosis in a patient with Alexander disease. 1213 31

Alexander disease (AxD) is a rare neurodegenerative disorder characterized by white matter degeneration and formation of cytoplasmic inclusions. Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) mutations have been reported in various forms of AxD since 2001. However, a definitive diagnosis remains difficult because of uncertain prevalence, and different clinical features seen in infantile AxD and adult AxD may lead to confusion and misdiagnosis. Here we report an epidemiological study conducted in Japan. Two nationwide questionnaire-based surveys were conducted using tentative diagnostic criteria. We gathered information regarding prevalence, neurological findings, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings, electrophysiological findings, genetic information, and the results of therapeutic interventions and home care. Prevalence of various forms of AxD was determined as 27.3% (infantile), 24.2% (juvenile), and 48.5% (adult). Prevalence of AxD in Japan was estimated to be approximately 1 case per 2.7 million individuals. The main characteristics of infantile and juvenile AxD include delayed psychomotor development or mental retardation, convulsions, macrocephaly, and predominant cerebral white matter abnormalities in the frontal lobe on brain MRI. The main characteristics of adult AxD include bulbar signs, muscle weakness with hyperreflexia, and signal abnormalities and/or atrophy of medulla oblongata and cervical spinal cord on MRI. To ensure correct diagnosis of AxD, the physician should understand the importance of the process of GFAP genetic testing, which provides definitive diagnosis. Therefore, we propose new clinical guidelines for diagnosing AxD based on simplified classifications: cerebral AxD (type 1), bulbospinal AxD (type 2), and intermediate form (type 3).
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PMID:Nationwide survey of Alexander disease in Japan and proposed new guidelines for diagnosis. 2153 27

Alexander disease (AD) is a rare white matter disorder resulting from mutations in the gene encoding for the glial fibrillary acidic protein. Diffuse white matter involvement with frontal predominance is typical of infantile AD that is clinically characterized by progressive motor and mental retardation, seizures, and megaloencephaly. We describe the case of a 10-year-old patient harboring a de novo missense mutation c.235C > T (p.R79C) in the GFAP gene, showing a relatively slow clinical and neuroradiologic progression of disease associated with a previously unreported magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) finding consistent with the so-called tigroid pattern. This pattern has been previously described in only a few different neurologic conditions, including Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease and some lysosomal disorders. This report expands the spectrum of MRI features in AD.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging "tigroid pattern" in Alexander disease. 2325 69