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)

Two cousins and an unrelated patient, all offspring of consanguineous parents, presented with Peters anomaly, unusual facial appearance, disproportionate short stature, retarded skeletal maturation, and a variable degree of mental retardation. Variable digital, cardiac, CNS, and urogenital anomalies were present. The inheritance is probably autosomal recessive. The condition is a distinct clinical entity for which we suggest the eponym Krause-Kivlin syndrome. Peters anomaly is thought to result from abnormal migration of neural crest cells. A similar mechanism was implicated in the pathogenesis of other disorders of the anterior chamber. The presence of Peters anomaly, and possibly of other corneal endothelial disorders in a newborn infant, should alert the clinician to the possibility of this syndrome. Communicating hydrocephalus (or brain atrophy) and polyhydramnios were documented in two patients, potentially allowing prenatal diagnosis in secondary familial cases.
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PMID:Autosomal recessive Peters anomaly, typical facial appearance, failure to thrive, hydrocephalus, and other anomalies: further delineation of the Krause-Kivlin syndrome. 148 36

Peters syndrome is a congenital disease resulting from deficient cleavage of the anterior chamber of the eye. Peters-plus syndrome (PpS) is characterized by the typical ocular anomalies of Peters syndrome in association with impaired growth, mental retardation and other malformations. We report the first prenatal description of PpS in the 20-week fetus of a consanguineous couple. Ultrasound examination revealed microphthalmia and hyperechogenicity of the anterior part of the eye with a central defect, micrognathia and long philtrum, short limbs with broad extremities and unilateral multicystic kidney. The pregnancy was terminated on parental request. Autopsy, including careful ocular examination, established the diagnosis of PpS. PpS has an autosomal-recessive mode of inheritance. The ocular anomaly has been linked with mutations in genes PAX6, PITX2, PITX3 and CYP1B1, but the causal factor of PpS remains unknown.
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PMID:Prenatal sonographic findings in Peters-plus syndrome. 1591 77