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)

We describe two sibs with mental retardation, facial anomalies, polydactyly, cerebellar vermis agenesis, and either meningocele or renal cystic dysplasia. The patients' condition appears to belong to a group of cerebro-reno-digital syndromes. Autosomal recessive inheritance is suggested.
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PMID:Cerebro-reno-digital syndrome in two sibs. 813 92

Macro-orchidism (MO) is the increase of the testicular volume, up to 25 ml in the adult male. It is frequently associated with mental retardation (MR) with fragile X-chromosome (FXC) (Martin-Bell syndrome). Sometimes it is of unknown origin and is called "benign idiopathic macro-orchidism" (BIMO). MO has also been described in association with bilateral testicular tumors, idiopathic precocious puberty, juvenile hypothyroidism and, more rarely, with congenital testicular cysts (cystic testicular dysplasia) and testicular microlithiasis in a patient treated with GH. The most common presentation is MR associated with MO, with positive or negative FXC. Among MO with MR and FXC-marfanoid habitus patients have been described and in the Atkin-Flaitz syndrome patients. Management of MO must be conservative in all cases and testicular biopsy must only be performed to diagnose leukemic infiltration or carcinoma in situ (CIS), or as the last fertility diagnostic test in BIMO. A wide range of primary testicular lesions may histopathologically be found: preserved spermatogenesis tubes, only Sertoli cell pattern and complete tubular sclerosis. Interstitial edema, frequently implicated in the MO pathogeny, does not explain by itself the important increase in testicular volume. In our laboratory, we have demonstrated that the increment of the testicular volume in MO is associated with a significant increase in the length of the seminiferous tubules. MO may pathogenically be intimately related to some hormonal regulation mechanism or to a higher seminiferous tubule sensitivity to FSH.
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PMID:[Macro-orchidism: new pathogenetic and histopathologic aspects]. 819

Trichothiodystrophy is a neuroectodermal syndrome with features of a specific hair dysplasia associated with disorders in organs derived from ectoderm and neuroectoderm. The key finding is brittle hair with low sulfur content. Polarizing microscopy shows alternating dark and light bands with trichoscisis and absent or defective cuticle. Patients with trichothiodystrophy have short, sparse, dry and easily broken hair. Growth retardation and mental retardation are almost obligatory findings. The skin and the nails are very often affected; other neuroectodermal disorders are associated, but none is a constant feature. The disease is transmitted as an autosomal recessive trait.
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PMID:[Trichothiodystrophy. Hair examination as a diagnostic tool]. 831 59

A 33 year-old man with undiagnosed neuropathy showing mental retardation and involuntary movements has been nourished for a long period by total parenteral nutrition (TPN) because of frequent vomiting and repeated aspiration pneumonitis. After ten months' TPN, macrocytic anemia and neutropenia developed and iron preparation was administered without hematological improvement. Bone marrow examination revealed normocellular marrow without features of megaloblastosis and dysplasia. In some erythroblasts and immature myeloid cells, vacuoles were observed and mature granulocytes were reduced in the bone marrow. Both serum copper and ceruloplasmin were very low (12 micrograms/dl and 7mg/dl, respectively). Thus, oral administration of copper sulfate resulted in marked increase of reticulocytes and subsequent improvement of anemia and neutropenia within two months. Copper deficiency is a rare condition, but during an unusual nutrition such as TNP, hematological abnormality due to copper deficiency must be noticed to occur.
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PMID:[Anemia and neutropenia due to copper deficiency during long-term total parenteral nutrition]. 849 15

We present a patient with spondyloperipheral dysplasia, a rare skeletal dysplasia which is characterized by vertebral body abnormalities (platyspondyly, end-plate indentations) and brachydactyly. Our patient also manifested a characteristic "pugilistic" face, sensorineural deafness and mental retardation. This chondroosseous dysplasia appears to be inherited as an autosomal dominant disorder. It appears that there is considerable clinical variability in spondyloperipheral dysplasia.
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PMID:Spondyloperipheral dysplasia. 858 74

We demonstrate that isolated glycerol kinase (GK) deficiency in three families results from mutation of the Xp21 GK gene. GK mutations were detected in four patients with widely differing phenotypes. Patient 1 had a splice-site mutation causing premature termination. His general health was good despite absent GK activity, indicating that isolated GK deficiency can be silent. Patient 2 had GK deficiency and a severe phenotype involving psychomotor retardation and growth delay, bone dysplasia, and seizures, similar to the severe phenotype of one of the first described cases of GK deficiency. His younger brother, patient 3, also had GK deficiency, but so far his development has been normal. GK exon 17 was deleted in both brothers, implicating additional factors in causation of the severe phenotype of patient 2. Patient 4 had both GK deficiency with mental retardation and a GK missense mutation (D440V). Possible explanations for the phenotypic variation of these four patients include ascertainment bias; metabolic or environmental stress as a precipitating factor in revealing GK-related changes, as has previously been described in juvenile GK deficiency; and interactions with functional polymorphisms in other genes that alter the effect of GK deficiency on normal development.
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PMID:Mutations and phenotype in isolated glycerol kinase deficiency. 865 Dec 97

We present the largest single series of cases (n = 5) of penoscrotal transposition (PST) with carefully documented nongenitourinary/anal anomalies, none of which fell into categories of known syndromes, associations, sequences or chromosome disorders. Several unexpected anomalies were observed including coloboma of the iris and retina, hydrocephalus, microcephaly, diaphragmatic hernia, tracheo-esophageal fistula/esophageal atresia and cleft palate. The most frequent anomalies other than PST were renal defects (100%) such as renal agenesis and dysplasia, imperforate anus (60%), central nervous system anomalies (60%) and preaxial upper limb defects (40%). Cardiovascular defects (atrial septal defect, double aortic arch with vascular ring) were noted in only one case. The surviving patients (3/5) had postnatal growth failure and mental retardation. Our 5 PST patients are compared to 16 well-documented cases from the literature. The overall incidence of various extragenital abnormalities were: renal (90%), mental retardation (60%), imperforate anus (33%), central nervous system (CNS) anomalies (29%), vertebral defects (29%), preaxial limb defects (24%) and congenital heart disease (19%). PST is a rare heterogenous anomaly, the detection of which should warrant careful clinical evaluation to rule out other anomalies, especially of the urinary system, gastrointestinal tract, upper limbs, craniofacial region and central nervous system. PST may be a localized field defect involving the genitourinary system; however, the wide variety of more distant defects noted in our series and the literature would raise doubt about that assumption. The high frequency of growth deficiency and mental retardation has also not been given due respect as accompanying problems associated with PST.
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PMID:Penoscrotal transposition and associated anomalies: report of five new cases and review of the literature. 884 15

Fourteen patients from six families have been reported in which microcephaly occurs in conjunction with lymphoedema, with no evidence of mental retardation or serious neurological disabilities. Chorioretinal dysplasia was noted in a small number of affected individuals. Inheritance was either autosomal dominant or X-linked and the question has been raised whether all these cases represent one entity or separate syndromes. We report the 7th family with two affected sibs of different sex. Developmental testing revealed normal to borderline intelligence associated with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. The suggested mode of inheritance in this family is autosomal recessive. X-linked dominant inheritance cannot be ruled out, however, since the male was more severely involved than the female. We concur with previous authors that the association of microcephaly and lymphoedema is a distinct genetic syndrome and we propose to name this entity the 'microcephaly-lymphoedema syndrome'.
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PMID:The microcephaly-lymphoedema syndrome: report of an additional family. 886 59

We report a case of the sonographic detection of oculoauriculovertebral dysplasia in a fetus at 15 weeks' gestation. An early diagnosis was suggested by observation of a maxillar cleft in association with unilateral microphthalmia. In the presence of microphthalmia the syndrome is likely to include mental retardation. When the diagnosis is made in the perinatal period, management generally involves cosmetic surgery. If, however, the condition is recognized in the early stages of gestation, termination of pregnancy may be an option.
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PMID:Early prenatal diagnosis of oculoauriculovertebral dysplasia or the Goldenhar syndrome. 901 84

The autosomal recessive disorder Bardet-Biedl syndrome is characterised by retinal degeneration, polydactyly, obesity, mental retardation, hypogenitalism, renal dysplasia, and short stature. It is heterogeneous with at least four gene loci (BBS1-4) having been mapped to date. We have studied 18 multiply affected families noting the presence of both major and minor manifestations. Using a fluorescently based PCR technique, we genotyped each family member and assigned linkage to one of the four loci. Given this degree of heterogeneity we hoped to find phenotypic differences between linkage categories. We found 44% of families linked to 11q13 (BBS1) and 17% linked to 16q21 (BBS2). Only one family was linked to 15q22 (BBS4) and none to 3p12. We conclude that BBS1 is the major locus among white Bardet-Biedl patients and that BBS3 is extremely rare. Only subtle phenotypic differences were observed, the most striking of which was a finding of taller affected offspring compared with their parents in the BBS1 category. Affected subjects in the BBS2 and 4 groups were significantly shorter than their parents. Twenty eight percent of pedigrees did not show linkage to any known locus, evidence for at least a fifth gene. We conclude that the different genes responsible for Bardet-Biedl syndrome may influence growth characteristics such as height.
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PMID:Bardet-Biedl syndrome: a molecular and phenotypic study of 18 families. 903 82


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