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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (mental retardation)
15,878 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

76 out of 77 children surviving IRDS with the aid of intermittent positive pressure ventilation have been followed-up by the age 2.6-7.6 years together with 68 matched controls. Moderate or severe neurological, developmental or mental abnormalities were present in 17% of all IRDS survivors. Statistical comparison of the matched pairs of IRDS survivors and controls revealed no significant differences in the prevalence of abnormalities. In the IRDS survivors the occurrence of cerebral palsy related to prematurity while the development of psycho-motor and mental retardation related to low birth weight and low milk intake during the first week suggesting that both prenatal and postnatal growth retardation may have been of importance. Statistical analysis of a number of preventilatory and ventilatory parameters did not show significant differences between these groups of IRDS survivors and the remainder. Ventilator treatment is recommended as a promising adjunct to the therapy of severe IRDS in centers where the necessary experience and equipment is at hand.
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PMID:Long term prognosis of infants with severe idiopathic respiratory distress syndrome. I. Neurological and mental outcome. 34 86

Reasons for the high adolescent birthrate in the U.S., medical, psychological, and social repercussions of teenage pregnancy, and facts and myths about sex education and contraception for young people are discussed. About 30% of U.S. women under 20 become pregnant outside marriage, and many more are pregnant when they marry. The reasons for the high pregnancy rates in young people include recent early menarch, which accounts for 94% fertility in 17.5-year-olds, better health, and ignorance about contraception and basic facts about reproduction. Pregnant adolescents risk toxemia, anemia, puerperal morbidity, prematurity, neonatal mortality, and congenital defects such as mental retardation in the baby. They face family alienation, loss of educational and employment opportunities, forced marriage, and high suicide rates in addition to the trials of puberty. Many girls believe that their fertile period is during menses, that pills are dangerous, that they are not fertile. Studies have shown that sex education can lower repeat pregnancies 67%. Recent research has negated the belief that many young women desire pregnancy unconsciously. Current information shows that supplying contraception will not encourage young people to begin having intercourse. Most sex education courses in the U.S. are given after the average teenagers become active sexually. It is believed that contraception should be provided universally for young people, and that parental authorization of contraception would probably mend family ties, certainly better than would unwanted pregnancy.
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PMID:[Social and psychological aspects of contraception in adolescents]. 98 31

A pediatric neurologist analyzed the case histories of 30 4-16 year old children diagnosed with cerebellar ataxia in the pediatric neurology unit at the Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Edinburgh, Scotland to examine its clinical features, investigative findings, and etiology. Previous unfavorable events happened to 14 children (46.6%). Yet only 6 (42.8%) of these 14 children had unfavorable events of etiological significance. These previous unfavorable events occurred during the perinatal period (48%). These events in order of significance were asphyxia, prematurity, neonatal jaundice, and trauma. 66.6% of all children had an unsteady gait. The 2nd and 3rd most common signs of cerebellar ataxia were truncal ataxia (53.3%) and hypotonia (36.6%). The next most common symptom was considerable delay in reaching gross motor milestones (50%) such as not sitting until 2 years old. 23 (76.6%) of the children had dysfunctions in 1 of the cerebellar divisions. Clinical examination found dysfunctions most often in the paleocerebellum (86.6) followed by the neocerebellum (70%) and archicerebellum (56.6%). The paleocerebellum and the archicerebellum were the only divisions involved in 6 and 1 of the remaining children, respectively. The most common cause of ataxia was hydrocephalus (23.3%) followed by perinatal problems (20%). 70% of the patients also experienced other central nervous system conditions such as macrocephaly and mental retardation. 5 children had normal investigative findings, 3 of whom had cerebellar ataxia syndrome, 1 had congenital ataxic cerebral palsy, and 1 had familiar ataxia.
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PMID:Cerebellar ataxia in childhood: a review of clinical features, investigative findings and aetiology in 30 cases. 150 89

Gene localization was determined by linkage analysis in 5 families with non-specific X-linked mental retardation (MRX) and were MRX1, Xp11.4-q21.31; MRX10, Xp21.3-p11.4; MRX11, Xp21.3-p11.22; MRX12, Xp21.3-q21.1; and MRX13, Xp22.3-q21.22. Four of these localizations cross the dystrophin brain promoter, a candidate locus for MRX. None of the affected individuals who were tested showed variation suggestive of a deletion. No consistent clinical features were observed between or within 4 of the 5 families. In MRX12, prematurity or low birth weight, hypotelorism and short stature were seen in several affected males. Heterozygote manifestations occurred in 3 families. There was no evidence to suggest involvement of the same gene in more than one family, nor to clinically separate these families into distinct genetic entities. Non-overlapping localizations for MRX1 and MRX10 demonstrate the existence of at least 2 separate loci among these 5 families.
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PMID:Localization of non-specific X-linked mental retardation genes. 160 17

We examined the relative impact of infant tracheostomy in comparison to associated medical and social factors, on developmental outcome as part of a cross-sectional follow-up of 32 children. These children had no mental retardation, physical handicap, or severe neurological problems, but had a history of long-term tracheostomy in infancy, ranging from 3 to 146 months duration. Medical factors evaluated included prematurity, neurological status, severity of illness, and number of weeks hospitalized. Social factors included parental education and occupation. Outcome measures included IQ, language quotient, growth parameters, and behavioral competence. Correlation analyses, stepwise multiple regression analyses, and t-tests were used. Early medical illnesses were significant predictors of cognitive, language, and growth outcome. Severity of medical complications at birth and the presence of any neurological problem predicted 49% of the variance in IQ at follow-up. Social class was the only variable to predict behavioral outcome, accounting for 28% of the variance. For children without confounding medical conditions, tracheostomy had a negative impact on overall language and auditory comprehension. Once children with confounding medical risk factors were removed from the sample, children with history of infant tracheostomy exhibited significantly lower overall mean language scores (106 versus 120), and lower mean language comprehension scores (104 versus 119) than a matched comparison group.
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PMID:Medical and social factors as predictors of outcome in infant tracheostomy. 172 34

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

In an epidemiological study of a county cohort of 4,138 liveborn children, surveyed at age four, 45 had disability (1.1%). The following period prevalences from birth to age four in per mille were found: motor handicap 5.1, to include cerebral palsy 4.1, myelomeningocele and hydrocephalus 0.5, and metabolic disorders 0.5; severe mental retardation 2.9, mild 1.4, subnormality 2.7; epilepsy 4.6; severe visual defect 1.4; severe auditory defect 0.7. Perinatal damage alone was likely in only three children out of 45. Two thirds had a prenatal cause or a combination of prenatal and perinatal causes. Birth asphyxia seemed to be a rare cause of motor disability and mental retardation. Prematurity per se gave a risk of spastic diplegia, but not of mental retardation. Among the mentally retarded, half were light for gestational age, and in more than half, the damage occurred prenatally.
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PMID:An epidemiological study of disability in 4-year-old children from a birth cohort in Frederiksborg County, Denmark. 234 71

An epidemiological community-based study of incident cases with non-provoked epileptic seizures, using case-referent methodology, was carried out to explore possible risk factors for epileptic seizures. 83 cases, between 17 and 74 years of age, of whom 67.4% had seizures of localized onset, were compared with 2 age- and sex-matched referents. Higher birth weight, movement disabilities, mental retardation, head trauma, brain tumor, depression, a period of unemployment during the previous 6 months and a history of epilepsy in relatives were more common in cases than in referent subjects. No difference was found in the socioeconomic factors investigated, except that the cases belonged to smaller households. Prematurity, home or hospital birth, parents' age at birth of cases or referents, febrile convulsions in relatives, various infections including meningitis and encephalitis, cerebrovascular disease, and alcohol, tobacco, sleep and nutritional habits were not found to be associated with development of seizures. The recent life events investigated, at home or at work, occurred as often in cases as in referents, except that significantly fewer cases had received any increase in salary during the last 6 months. The relationship between depression and development of seizures should be explored further. Moreover, the possibility of false negative results should be considered because of the sample size.
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PMID:An incident case-referent study of epileptic seizures in adults. 235 57

Five hundred children and adolescents affected by mild mental retardation were studied together with their families with regard to a number of psycho-social, medical and genetic factors. Statistical studies were performed with these data and showed that this apparently homogeneous population could in fact be divided into three subgroups. The first and by far the largest group (66%) was constituted by a clinically normal population but in whom adverse social and cultural factors were dominant. In the second subgroup (20%) the mental retardation was much more pronounced (IQ of 50----65) and the socio-cultural and socio-economic levels were particularly low. Finally, organic causes (prematurity, dystocic, labour, etc.) seemed to constitute the principal factor explaining the retardation observed in the third subgroup (14%). The second subgroup comprising of 50 children and their families, were observed more closely; in this group 20 cases of known genetic diseases were found.
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PMID:The geneticist and the so-called "socio cultural" familial mental retardation. 274 69

As many as 50 children with the antenatal period complicated by prematurity risk were subjected to clinical and hormonal studies during the first year of life. To estimate adrenal function, excretion of 17-ketosteroids, corticoids and their fractions with urine was investigated. The children born in a satisfactory state with a physiological body weight and length demonstrated the lag in the establishment of motor and static functions as well as mental retardation. It has been discovered that the clinical course of the early neonatal and subsequent periods of the child's development is dependent on adrenal function.
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PMID:[Characteristics of the development during the 1st year of life of children born to mothers with threatened premature labor of the endocrine etiology]. 276 61


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