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

We report on 4 new cases of mildly retarded patients with marfanoid habitus and a characteristic constellation of minor anomalies. These patients, although sporadic, are likely to be affected by the same X-linked type of mental retardation described by Lujan et al. (American Journal of Medical Genetics 17:311-322, 1984) and more recently by Fryns and Buttiens (American Journal of Medical Genetics 28:267-274, 1987). The similar psychiatric history in 2 of our patients suggests that psychotic behaviour could be an additional manifestation, previously unrecognized in this condition. Late diagnosis of this relatively new syndrome in all our patients confirms the difficulty of the nosologic definition of mentally retarded individuals on clinical grounds alone. On the other hand, the Lujan-Fryns syndrome appears to be more common than one would have thought.
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PMID:X-linked mental retardation with marfanoid habitus: first report of four Italian patients. 201 63

Schizophrenia is considered to be a heterogenous disorder. Different etiopathological mechanism can be attributed to a similar clinical picture as described in DSM-III-R criteria. We present a case of a young man diagnosed on different occasions as schizophrenic with mild mental retardation. Clinical examination revealed signs and symptoms most compatible with the diagnosis of Lujan-Fryns syndrome, an X-linked mental retardation syndrome with marfanoid features, frequently associated with psychotic or other psychiatric symptoms. In all patients with symptoms of schizophrenia and mental retardation Lujan-Fryns syndrome should be considered in the differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Lujan-Fryns syndrome in the differential diagnosis of schizophrenia. 872 50

A severely mentally retarded 20-year-old male adult with a marfanoid habitus reported since birth and dysmorphic features is described. A younger brother presented the same appearance at birth but died at 2 months of age following a cardiopathy. Despite some clinical differences, his features are very close to the Lujan-Fryns syndrome and to two unrelated girls described by de Die-Smulders et al. (1). This case shows the challenge that clinicians could have while investigating patients with mental retardation and marfanoid habitus for diagnosis and genetic counseling.
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PMID:Severe mental retardation with marfanoid habitus in a young Lebanese male. A diagnostic challenge. 932 61

In an institutionalised population of 471 mentally retarded adult residents (436 males and 35 females), 22 males (i.e. 5 % of the male population) had XLMR, accounting for 36.1 % of the residents diagnosed with a monogenic disorder (n = 61). Fragile X syndrome (FRAXA) was diagnosed in 16 residents, X-linked mental retardation with marfanoid habitus (Lujan-Fryns syndrome) in 2, and non-specific X-linked mental retardation (MRX) in 4 males. The 4 MRX-patients included 3 male sibs of a family, carrying a mutation in the IL-1 receptor accessory protein-like gene, and one male patient member of the MRX-44 family (linkage with LOD-score of 2.90). In the group of 215 males with idiopathic mental retardation (MR), family histories and pedigree data were compatible with XLMR in 35 males (35/215 = 16.3 %) from 32 families. Of these 35 males, 5.7 % were microcephalic with dysmorphic features and 5.7 % macrocephalic; micro-orchidism and macro-orchidism were each found in 11.4 %. One macrocephalic male had also macro-orchidism and dysmorphic features. In this study, the diagnosis of XLMR could thus be proposed in 57 males i.e. 13.1 % of the total male population. The clinical phenotype, behavioural problems and follow-up data in these different subgroups of XLMR are presented.
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PMID:The clinical phenotype in institutionalised adult males with X-linked mental retardation (XLMR). 1133 18

The Lujan-Fryns syndrome or X-linked mental retardation with marfanoid habitus syndrome is a syndromal X-linked form of mental retardation, affecting predominantly males. The prevalence is not known for the general population. The syndrome is associated with mild to moderate mental retardation, distinct facial dysmorphism (long narrow face, maxillary hypoplasia, small mandible and prominent forehead), tall marfanoid stature and long slender extremities, and behavioural problems. The genetic defect is not known. The diagnosis is based on the presence of the clinical manifestations. Genetic counselling is according to X-linked recessive inheritance. Prenatal testing is not possible. There is no specific treatment for this condition. Patients need special education and psychological follow-up, and attention should be given to diagnose early psychiatric disorders.
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PMID:Lujan-Fryns syndrome (mental retardation, X-linked, marfanoid habitus). 1683 Dec 21

X-linked mental retardation (XLMR) affects 1-2/1,000 males and accounts for approximately 10% of all mental retardation (MR). We have ascertained a syndromic form of XLMR segregating within a five-generation family with seven affected males. Prominent characteristics include mild to severe MR, cortical malformation, microcephaly, seizures, thin build with distinct facial features including a long and thin face, epicanthic folds, almond-shaped eyes, upslanting palpebral fissures and micrognathia and behavioral problems. Carrier females have normal physical appearance and intelligence. This combination of features is unreported and distinct from Lujan-Fryns syndrome, Snyder-Robinson syndrome, and zinc finger DHHC domain-containing 9-associated MR. We propose the name of this new syndrome to be CK syndrome.
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PMID:Characterization of a new X-linked mental retardation syndrome with microcephaly, cortical malformation, and thin habitus. 1984 90