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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two cases (father and son) clinically diagnosed as Menzel type of heredoataxia were examined pathologically, and found nonspecific, multisystem degenerations of central nervous system spreading from brain stem to cerebellum and spinal cord. Common neuropathological findings of both cases were marked neuronal loss, demyelination and cellular and fibrous gliosis in pallidum (esp. internal segment), body of Luys, substantia nigra, dentate nucleus, red nucleus, cranial and spinal motor nuclei, spinocerebellar tracts and Clarke's column. There were no abnormalities in cerebral cortex, caudate nucleus, putamen, thalamus and inferior olive nucleus. These findings had enough similarity to that of Japanese type of Joseph disease. The son who died 36 years old had showed clinically hyperreflexia, cerebellar ataxia, dystonic extrapyramidal movement, muscle atrophy and bulging eyes. Dominant pathological findings compared to the father case were neuronal loss of substantia nigra and red nucleus, fibrous gliosis of superior peduncles and grumose degeneration of dentate nucleus. The father case died 76 years old had showed hyporeflexia, cerebellar ataxia and no bulging eyes clinically. The pathologica findings of pallidum, cranial and spinal motor nuclei, dorsal column and spinocerebellar tracts were more dominant than the other reported case. Dementia,
mental retardation
, epileptic episodes were not found in this family pedigree. Pathological changes of pallidonigral, pallidoluysian, dentatorubral and spinal cord which were common in Japanese type were less found in original type of Joseph disease in Europe. Authors discussed this difference in relation with progressive pallidumatrophy, dentato-rubro-pallido-luisian atrophy and hereditary spastic
ataxia
. According to the classification of clinical feature of Joseph disease in Europe, the father case was classified as type III (Machado phenotype) and the son case was as type I (Joseph phenotype). Reported cases of type III and familial autopsy cases of Joseph disease were so rare in Japan, authors reported on their clinicopathological findings.
...
PMID:[Autopsy cases of hereditary ataxia pathologically diagnosed as the Japanese type of Joseph disease--cliniconeuropathological findings]. 235 76
We examined the pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex using bio- and immunochemical methods with cultured cells derived from 2 boys with
mental retardation
,
ataxia
, and primary lactic acidemia due to partial deficiency in the PDH complex. We found a defect in dephosphorylation and the subsequent activation of the E1 alpha subunit of the enzyme.
...
PMID:Immunochemical analysis of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in 2 boys with primary lactic acidemia. 238 45
A large family with X-linked
mental retardation
, originally reported in 1944 by Allan, Herndon, and Dudley, has been reinvestigated. Twenty-nine males have been affected in seven generations. Clinical features include severe mental retardation, dysarthria,
ataxia
, athetoid movements, muscle hypoplasia, and spastic paraplegia with hyperreflexia, clonus, and Babinski reflexes. The facies appear elongated with normal head circumference, bitemporal narrowing, and large, simple ears. Contractures develop at both small and large joint. Statural growth is normal and macroorchidism does not occur. Longevity is not impaired. High-resolution chromosomes, serum creatine kinase, and amino acids are normal. This condition, termed the Allan-Herndon syndrome, appears distinct from other X-linked disorders having
mental retardation
, muscle hypoplasia, and spastic paraplegia.
...
PMID:Allan-Herndon syndrome. I. Clinical studies. 203 42
Diagnostic criteria for Rett syndrome (RS) were developed by representatives of the International Rett Syndrome Association and the Centers for Disease Control for use in future clinical and epidemiological studies. Necessary criteria are: normal prenatal and perinatal period; normal psychomotor development through the first 6 months of life; normal head circumference at birth, with subsequent deceleration of head growth; loss of purposeful hand skills; severely impaired expressive and receptive language; apparent severe mental retardation; and gait apraxia and truncal apraxia/
ataxia
. Supportive criteria include breathing dysfunction, seizures, spasticity, scoliosis, and growth retardation. The diagnosis of RS is considered tentative until 2 to 5 years of age. The differential diagnosis includes other disorders associated with
mental retardation
, cerebral palsy, and seizure disorders. These diagnostic criteria for RS should foster reliable communication among investigators and enhance the epidemiological and clinical research of this important disorder.
...
PMID:Diagnostic criteria for Rett syndrome. The Rett Syndrome Diagnostic Criteria Work Group. 245 7
We studied 5 boys, 2 to 10 years old, with marked or complete deficiency of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase and Lesch-Nyhan syndrome with varying degrees of
mental retardation
, dysarthria, chorea, dystonia, spasticity, and
ataxia
. Four patients had marked reduction of homovanillic acid in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and all showed low CSF 3-methoxy-4-hydroxy phenylethylene glycol, indicating reduced dopamine and norepinephrine turnover. Three patients showed high CSF 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, suggesting increased serotonin turnover. Some patients improved with carbidopa-levodopa, but others benefited from tetrabenazine, a monoamine-depleting agent. This study provides support for the theory of abnormal central monoamine metabolism in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome.
...
PMID:Lesch-Nyhan syndrome: a study of motor behavior and cerebrospinal fluid neurotransmitters. 245 72
The long-term outcome of infantile hydrocephalus (IH) in children born at term during a period of active shunt treatment was studied in a population-based survey. The series consisted of 68 children greater than or equal to 6 years old and born in 1967-78 in the south-western Swedish health care region. The clinical follow-up included neuro-paediatric assessment, Stott's test of motor impairment, the WISC test, CT and EEG analyses. Nineteen of the 68 children (28%) had cerebral palsy, 17 (25%) minor motor dysfunction and 32 (47%) no motor dysfunction;
mental retardation
was present in 26 (38%), 16 with an IQ 50-70 and 10 with IQ less than 50; 42 children (62%) had normal intelligence and epilepsy was found in 15 (22%). Compared with a non-shunted IH series from the 1950s, the survival of IH children had considerably increased. Of constituents characterizing the IH syndrome from the time prior to shunting,
ataxia
, divergent squint and the special "Cocktail-party behaviour" had significantly decreased, all of which conditions are highly related to chronic expansion of the ventricular system. The frequencies of other impairments such as
mental retardation
and epilepsy were fairly similar, reflecting the present increased survival of IH children with primarily non-IH-dependent brain damage. IH children with associated brain parenchymal defects had the poorest outcome, and those without had in general a much more favourable one. Thus the single most important factor for the outcome of IH was found to be the presence or absence of associated primary brain damage or maldevelopment.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of infantile hydrocephalus in Sweden: a clinical follow-up study in children born at term. 246 73
This report describes twin girls with typical features of ataxia-telangiectasia, including increased alpha-fetoprotein, radio-resistant DNA synthesis, characteristic chromosome abnormality, and immunodeficiency. They have, in addition, microcephaly and
mental retardation
. Complementation studies were performed utilizing Sendai virus--mediated fusion of fibroblast cell lines. Complementation was observed with patients in ataxia-telangiectasia complementation groups A, C, and E but not with the cell line from a patient with the Nijmegen breakage syndrome, in which patients have microcephaly, radio-resistant DNA synthesis, chromosome aberrations, and immunodeficiency but lack
ataxia
and telangiectasia. These data suggest that the Nijmegen breakage syndrome and the patients described here are not genetically distinct entities but form a spectrum of one disorder.
...
PMID:ATFresno: a phenotype linking ataxia-telangiectasia with the Nijmegen breakage syndrome. 249 Nov 81
Cerebellar hypoplasia is found in association with a variety of neurologic and systemic disorders. It is the primary finding in the uncommonly reported condition of autosomal recessive cerebellar hypoplasia. We describe two siblings with cerebellar hypoplasia documented in both by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and review the clinical features of previously reported cases of autosomal recessive cerebellar hypoplasia. The most common findings in this disorder are nonprogressive
ataxia
, strabismus,
mental retardation
, and speech delay with dysarthria. Previously reported cases have been confirmed by autopsy, pneumoencephalography, or computed tomographic (CT) scans. MRI clearly documents diffuse cerebellar hypoplasia and aids in distinguishing autosomal recessive cerebellar hypoplasia from other disorders. The pathophysiology of this disorder is uncertain, however, studies of the weaver mutant mouse (an animal model of autosomal recessive cerebellar hypoplasia) suggest that an abnormality of the Bergmann glia may lead to the observed granule cell layer deficiency in these patients. This diagnosis should be considered for children with nonprogressive
ataxia
and families should be made aware of the 25% recurrence risk.
...
PMID:Autosomal recessive cerebellar hypoplasia. 200 8
Xeroderma pigmentosum associated with neurological abnormalities is a less familiar neurocutaneous disorder. In this report, 35 patients with group A xeroderma pigmentosum were assessed for neurological complications. Of these, 17 showed microcephaly and 24
mental retardation
. Of 25 patients over 7 years of age, 22 had sensorineural deafness and 12 showed spinocerebellar signs such as nystagmus, dysarthria, tremor and
ataxia
, while none below 7 years of age had such neurological complications. Thirty-five EEG studies were performed on 29 patients, and 15 showed intermittent spindles of grouped theta waves with abnormal slow background activity and a poorly developed alpha rhythm, suggesting immature brain development or a regression from normal brain function in many areas including the diencephalon. Twenty-six patients were examined by cranial CT scan, of whom 20 showed abnormal CT findings such as ventricular dilatation, diffuse cortical atrophy, and marked thickening of the calvarial bones. The incidence of abnormal EEG and CT findings increased with advancing age in accordance with the development of neurological complications in the CNS, thus suggesting a chronic progressive degenerative disease.
...
PMID:EEG and CT abnormalities in xeroderma pigmentosum. 281 76
Rett syndrome is an increasingly recognized progressive disorder in females, commencing in infancy and characterized by autistic behavior, gait
ataxia
, stereotyped movements, seizures and generalized growth and
mental retardation
, possibly associated with disorders of central biogenic amine synthesis. The gene locus and pathogenesis of Rett syndrome are unknown. Autopsy studies in nine girls dying between 4 and 17 years, and sural nerve and muscle biopsies from two girls aged 3 and 17 years showed: (1) diffuse cortical atrophy/micrencephaly, with a decrease in brain weight by 12% to 34% of age-matched controls, apparently related to the duration of the disorder; (2) mild diffuse cortical atrophy with increased amounts of neuronal lipofuscin and occasional mild gliosis, but without signs of a storage disorder; (3) underpigmentation of the zona compacta nigrae, which showed fewer well-pigmented neurons for age and fewer melanin granules per neuron, while total numbers of nigral neurons and the substructure of neuromelanin were normal for age. No pathological changes were seen in other transmitter-specific brain stem nuclei; (4) immunoreactivity for tyrosine hydroxylase was slightly reduced in nigral and hypothalamic neurons, and the pituitary gland showed decreased immunoreaction for prolactin and growth hormone; (5) ultrastructurally, in frontal cortex and caudate nucleus, isolated abnormal neurites and reactive or degenerative axonal swellings were seen; the latter are possibly related to the nigral changes, suggesting some dysfunction of the dopaminergic nigrostriatal system, which is supported by neurochemical data; (6) preliminary biochemical studies revealed increased beta-endorphines in thalamus and cerebellum; (7) peripheral nerves demonstrated increase in small fibers without demyelination and increased numbers of neurofilaments in axons, suggesting distal axonopathy, while skeletal muscle showed alterations in the sarcoplasmic reticulum with circular profiles in the Z-filaments. These nonspecific changes may be interpreted as early signs of denervation. The variety of lesions in the central, neuroendocrine and peripheral neuromuscular systems in Rett syndrome are discussed with regard to their clinical and biochemical significance.
...
PMID:Neuropathology of Rett syndrome. 290 May 87
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