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 Costello syndrome is characterized by dwarfism, unique cutaneous lesions, distinct facial gestalt, and mental retardation. We present a Japanese patient with the Costello syndrome. She showed high serum IgM level during the early infantile period. Nissen's fundplication was carried out to treat severe gastroesophageal reflux. Endocrinological investigations revealed a partial deficiency of growth hormone.
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PMID:A Japanese patient with the Costello syndrome. 816 45

In 1977 Costello described two unrelated children with poor postnatal growth, mental retardation, curly hair, coarse face of similar appearance, and nasal papillomata, suggesting the existence of a previously undescribed syndrome of uncertain familial nature [Costello, Aust Paediatr J 13: 114-118, 1977]. The existence of this syndrome as a separate entity was substantiated several years later by two additional reports by Der Kaloustian et al. [Am J Med Genet 43:678-685, 1991] and Martin and Jones [Am J Med Genet 41:346-349, 1991]. More recently Borochowitz et al. [Am J Med Genet 43:678-685, 1992] described a new "multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation syndrome with facio-cutaneous-skeletal involvement." Whether this condition should be considered separately from the Costello syndrome is currently a matter of debate. We present three cases, two of whom are sibs, who support the identity of the two syndromes. Our aim is to better redefine the diagnostic criteria, describe the natural history, and confirm the genetic cause of the Costello syndrome, whose pattern of inheritance is most likely autosomal recessive.
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PMID:Costello syndrome: further clinical delineation, natural history, genetic definition, and nosology. 821 3

An 8-month-old boy having multiple congenital anomalies (MCA) and mental retardation (MR) as part of the Costello syndrome is described. This observation emphasizes once more the severe and early-onset postnatal growth failure as the first, major clinical sign of this MCA/MR syndrome.
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PMID:Costello syndrome: report of an 8-month-old marasmic boy. 865 85

Clinical and pathological observations of a 6-month-old-boy with Costello syndrome are reported. The main clinical findings were loose skin of the neck, hands, and feet, deep palmar and plantar creases, typical "coarse" face with thick lips and macroglossia, relative macrocephaly, mental retardation, short stature, arrhythmia, large size for gestational age, and poor feeding. At age 6 months he died of rhabdomyolysis. The major pathological findings were fine, disrupted, and loosely-constructed elastic fibers in the skin, tongue, pharynx, larynx, and upper esophagus, but not in the bronchi, alveoli, aorta, or coronary arteries. Hyperplasia of collagen fibers in the skin, hyperplasia of the mucous glands in the bronchus, narrowing of the pulmonary artery, degeneration of the atrial conduction system, calcification and ballooning of skeletal muscle fibers with infiltration of macrophages, and myoglobin depositions in the collecting ducts in the kidney were also observed. The degeneration of elastic fibers was confirmed in the skin of a second Costello syndrome patient. Expression of elastin mRNA in the patient's fibroblasts was normal in size and amount. Given that elastic fiber degeneration was observed in the tissues with clinical symptoms, we speculate that a defect of elastic fibers, possibly relating to alternative splicing in the elastin gene or to defects in elastin microfibrils, might be involved in the pathogenesis of Costello syndrome.
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PMID:Elastic fiber degeneration in Costello syndrome. 883 40

Costello syndrome is characterized by poor postnatal growth, mental retardation, curly hair, coarse face, loose skin of the hands and feet, and nasal papillomata. Patients with Costello syndrome have a high incidence of cardiac involvement, such as arrhythmias, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, or congenital anomalies. The importance of cardiac involvement in Costello syndrome has not been strongly emphasized thus far, although arrhythmia and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy are both serious forms of cardiac involvement. We report the case of a Japanese girl with Costello syndrome, who experienced life-threatening cardiac involvement throughout her life.
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PMID:Life-threatening cardiac involvement throughout life in a case of Costello syndrome. 900 9

Costello syndrome is a well delineated mental retardation syndrome of unknown aetiology in which the occurrence of benign tumours, especially papillomata, is recognised. We report two children in whom the diagnosis of Costello syndrome was made in the first months of life, who both developed a retroperitoneal embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. Although not previously reported, the occurrence of this relatively uncommon childhood tumour in two girls with Costello syndrome suggests that an increased risk of malignancy may be part of this condition. The genetic basis of this susceptibility requires further clarification.
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PMID:Costello syndrome: two cases with embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. 1042 28

We describe a 34-year-old woman with mental retardation, short stature, macrocephaly, a "coarse" face, hoarse voice, and redundant skin with deep palmar and plantar creases who had evident Costello syndrome. Lacking papillomata, she had wart-like lesions of the skin. The previously reported patients with Costello syndrome are reviewed. Costello syndrome is probably an autosomal dominant disorder, either caused by a mutation in a single gene or by microdeletion.
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PMID:Costello syndrome: report and review. 993 87

Costello syndrome is characterized by postnatal growth deficiency, mental retardation, curly hair, coarse characteristic face, and loose skin of hands and feet. Patients with this syndrome have a high incidence of cardiac involvement, including arrhythmia, atrial septal defect, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. We report a 16-year-old adolescent female with Costello syndrome who presents with hypercalciuria and urolithiasis.
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PMID:Hypercalciuria and urolithiasis in a case of Costello syndrome. 1010 Feb 91

We report a case of Costello syndrome, which is an uncommon multisystemic condition with cutaneous manifestations on the palms and soles. In the literature there are 29 cases described, all the studies are published in the genetic literature with a few exceptions. We add a further case associated with impaired glucose tolerance. The diagnostic clinical signs are impressive, and highly characteristic. Cutaneous manifestations are: loose skin of the hands and feet "washer woman's hand", hyperkeratosis palmoplantaris, curly or sparse hair, acanthosis nigricans, papillomata nasi. Coarse, progeroid facial features with a bulbous nose, feeding difficulties in infancy, cardiac involvement with cardiomyopathy or conduction defect, and in our case impaired glucose tolerance also presented. Postnatal growth retardation, mental retardation, and a distinctive friendly personality is characteristic. Hyperextensible fingers with broad distal phalanges and joint contractures were observed, and peroneal hypertonicity required treatment by Achilles tendon lengthening. The decreased glucose tolerance is interesting in the view of the acanthosis nigricans. No storage disease and no chromosomal abnormality were observed. Only in one case is a balanced translocation described in the literature.
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PMID:Costello syndrome with decreased glucose tolerance. 1052 30

Costello syndrome is characterized by mental retardation, loose skin, coarse face, skeletal deformations, cardiomyopathy, and predisposition to numerous malignancies. The genetic origin of Costello syndrome has not yet been defined. Using immunohistochemistry and metabolic labeling with [3H]-valine, we have established that cultured skin fibroblasts obtained from patients with Costello syndrome did not assemble elastic fibers, despite an adequate synthesis of tropoelastin and normal deposition of the microfibrillar scaffold. We found that impaired production of elastic fibers by these fibroblasts is associated with a functional deficiency of the 67-kD elastin-binding protein (EBP), which is normally required to chaperone tropoelastin through the secretory pathways and to its extracellular assembly. Metabolic pulse labeling of the 67-kD EBP with radioactive serine and further chase of this tracer indicated that both normal fibroblasts and fibroblasts from patients with Costello syndrome initially synthesized comparable amounts of this protein; however, the fibroblasts from Costello syndrome patients quickly lost it into the conditioned media. Because the normal association between EBP and tropoelastin can be disrupted on contact with galactosugar-bearing moieties, and the fibroblasts from patients with Costello syndrome revealed an unusual accumulation of chondroitin sulfate-bearing proteoglycans (CD44 and biglycan), we postulate that a chondroitin sulfate may be responsible for shedding EBP from Costello cells and in turn for their impaired elastogenesis. This was further supported by the fact that exposure to chondroitinase ABC, an enzyme capable of chondroitin sulfate degradation, restored normal production of elastic fibers by fibroblasts from patients with Costello syndrome. We also present evidence that loss of EBP from fibroblasts of Costello syndrome patients is associated with an unusually high rate of cellular proliferation.
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PMID:Decreased elastin deposition and high proliferation of fibroblasts from Costello syndrome are related to functional deficiency in the 67-kD elastin-binding protein. 1071 2


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