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)

A brother and sister from the island of Rodrigues had mental retardation, blindness owing to severe ocular malformations, short stature, dysmorphic facial features, hypotrichosis, and dental abnormalities. It is likely that they have a hitherto unrecognised autosomal recessive ectodermal dysplasia syndrome.
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PMID:Ectodermal dysplasia with blindness in sibs on the island of Rodrigues. 158 59

Two hundred and twenty-one disabled children from seven diagnostic groups have been examined with respect to height, weight and prevalence of four different feeding problems. Retarded growth and feeding problems were common in children with cerebral palsy, mental retardation, congenital heart disease and deaf-blindness, but rare in children with esophagus atresia, cystic fibrosis and epilepsy. Mean relative height and weight were significantly lower (p much less than 0.01) in children with mechanical feeding problems, such as impairment of self-feeding skills and oral-motor dysfunction, than in children without these problems, regardless of diagnostic group. Mean relative weight was also significantly lower in children with poor appetite than in children with good appetite. Feeding problems contribute to short stature and underweight in severely disabled children.
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PMID:Feeding problems, height and weight in different groups of disabled children. 183 17

Five community-based services in Israel for disabled adolescents are described. Three of them are day centers and two are afternoon clubs. They provide rehabilitation resources for teenagers with various kinds of disabilities including cerebral palsy, mental retardation, blindness, deafness and emotional handicaps. These services are analyzed and discussed with regard to addressing the major needs of adolescents with disabilities, with the aim of achieving an optimal degree of independence and preparation for normalized life. The programs include resources such as vocational rehabilitation, independent living education, recreational activities, social skills training, sexuality education in addition to creating opportunities to mix and socialize with nondisabled youth. The function of pediatric and adolescent medicine physicians in such services is emphasized as imperative in providing a comprehensive rehabilitation program for youth with disabilities.
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PMID:Developing community-based services for youth with disabilities. 183 26

Medical-educational cooperation is of long standing in disability care. The roots of this tradition in the fields of blindness, deafness, physical disability, and mental retardation are touched on, and the further development of the overall medical-educational task in rehabilitation is outlined. Various aspects of team work and of remedial education systematics are set out in light of the changing positions among experts in the rehabilitation process. The importance of value orientation is emphasized.
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PMID:[Medicine and education]. 183 11

The purpose of this cohort study was to determine the incidence of and risk factors for major neurodevelopmental impairments among survivors of extreme prematurity. The study cohort comprised 100 infants born between 24 and 28 weeks of gestational age at one tertiary center from 1983 to 1984. Twenty-five infants (25%) died; 75 (75%) survived until follow-up (mean, 60 months). Standardized neurodevelopmental and psychometric assessments were performed in blind fashion on 68 of the 75 surviving children (91% follow-up). Informal assessments (parent, teacher, and physician reports) were obtained instead for seven (9%) children who had relocated outside of the area. Overall, 19 children (25%) had one or more major impairments: mental retardation, 9; cerebral palsy, 4; multiple impairments, 5; and blindness, 1. Despite a high prevalence of impairments, 95% of children (n = 71) were functionally independent [corrected]. Special educational resources were definitely necessary for seven (9%) and possibly needed for 36 (48%) additional children. Univariate analyses revealed four significant risk factors for cerebral palsy: hydrocephalus (relative risk = 12.2), grades III and IV intraventricular hemorrhage (relative risk = 5.8), 5-minute Apgar score lower than 7 (relative risk = 5.7), and bronchopulmonary dysplasia (relative risk = 5.5). Hydrocephalus was the only significant risk factor observed for mental retardation (relative risk = 5.4). Risk factors predicting a need for special education resources included sepsis (relative risk = 24.9), low socioeconomic status (relative risk = 16.3), and nonwhite race (relative risk = 3.0). Thus our data suggest that biomedical factors appear to confer the greatest risk of major impairments; sociodemographic factors appear to have a significant impact on educational risk in extremely premature infants who do not die. Continued follow-up with biomedical and developmental-social interventions appears warranted to decrease the risk of educational underachievement in this population.
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PMID:Risk factors for major neurodevelopmental impairments and need for special education resources in extremely premature infants. 191 94

Norrie disease is an X-linked recessive disorder characterized by congenital blindness and, in many cases, mental retardation. Some Norrie disease cases have been shown to be associated with a submicroscopic deletion in chromosomal region Xp11.3. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was collected from four male patients with an X-chromosomal deletion associated with Norrie disease. CSF proteins were resolved using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and then analyzed by computer using the Elsie V program. Our analysis revealed a protein that appears to be altered in patients with Norrie disease deletion.
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PMID:Abnormal protein in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with a submicroscopic X-chromosomal deletion associated with Norrie disease: preliminary report. 193 7

Biotinidase deficiency is an inborn error of metabolism that is transmitted as an autosomal recessive disorder. Symptoms include hearing loss, ataxia, blindness, mental retardation, and seizures. The metabolic defect is an inability to recycle the vitamin biotin, which is an important cofactor in key enzymes. We therefore sought to develop an animal model for this disorder by inducing biotin deficiency. Rat pups were divided into control and experimental groups. Control rats were fed a normal diet whereas experimental animals were given a diet deficient in biotin. Animals from both groups underwent brain stem auditory evoked potential testing at various ages. Wave I thresholds at various ages were similar in both groups. Latencies for wave I, however, and interpeak latencies (I-IV) were prolonged in the biotin-deficient groups compared to controls. Scanning electron microscopy of the organ of Corti in biotin-deficient animals showed no significant hair cell loss. The biotin-deficient developing rat appears to acquire functional changes in the auditory brain stem. These effects may be caused by defective myelination, since biotin is important in fatty acid metabolism.
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PMID:Rat as a potential model for hearing loss in biotinidase deficiency. 201 87

Between 1986 and 1988 a door-to-door survey was conducted on a stable rural population of 60,820 in central Ethiopia. Trained lay health workers made a complete census and identified cases with symptoms and signs of neurological disorders, using specially designed questionnaires which, in a previous pilot study, were found to have a sensitivity of 91% and specificity of 85%. Neurological disorders in the rural population were epilepsy, postpoliomyelitis paralysis, mental retardation, peripheral neuropathy (mainly due to leprosy), and deaf-mutism with prevalence rates (cases/100,000 population) of 520, 240, 170, 150 and 130, respectively. The prevalence rates of the other less common neurological disorders were 62 for hemiparesis (15 of which were for cerebrovascular accidents), 20 for cerebral palsy, 16 for optic atrophy, 12 for perceptive deafness, 10 for tropical spastic paraparesis, 7 for Parkinson's disease and 5 for motor neuron disease, ataxia and chorea/athetosis. Among related non-neurological conditions, blindness, locomotor disability and deafness were predominant. The significance and role of such a neuroepidemiological study in laying the strategies for the prevention of neurological disorders and rehabilitation of patients are discussed in the context of a developing country.
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PMID:Community-based study of neurological disorders in rural central Ethiopia. 208 51

Norrie's disease is an x-linked recessive disorder characterized by progressive oculoacousticocerebral degeneration. The light and electron microscopic changes in the temporal bones, eyes, and brain of an affected 77-year-old man who suffered from bilateral profound sensorineural hearing loss, blindness, and mental retardation are described. The inner ears showed marked atrophy of the stria vascularis, severe degeneration of hair cells and cochlear neurons, and connective tissue proliferation in the spiral ganglion, osseous spiral lamina, and walls of the membranous vestibular labyrinth. The eyes showed detached retinae, dense proliferation of fibrillary glial cells in the retina and vitreous, severe atrophy of the optic nerves, and degenerative hyalinization of blood vessels. This case is the first published report of the histopathology of the inner ear in Norrie's disease.
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PMID:Histopathology of the ears, eyes, and brain in Norrie's disease (oculoacousticocerebral degeneration). 234 94

A retrospective study was made of 16 premature infants who were visually inattentive despite normal eye findings and a lack of factors predisposing them to cerebral blindness. A comparison of this study group with other premature infants who were visually attentive revealed a much greater incidence of upper motor neuron disease and mental retardation in the study infants.
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PMID:The visually inattentive preterm infant. 239 20


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