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)

Three atypical patients with clinical and laboratory findings of Hurler syndrome, but without alpha-L-iduronidase deficiency, are described. Clinical features included characteristic facies, mental retardation, corneal clouding, dysostosis multiplex, restriction of joint mobility, and hepatosplenomegaly. Excessive amounts of chondroitin sulfate B and heparitin sulfate were excreted in the urine. alpha-L-Iduronidase activities in leucocytes and liver tissues were within the normal range or somewhat elevated.
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PMID:Atypical Hurler syndrome without alpha-L-iduronidase deficiency. 13 68

Clinical, biochemical, and electron microscopic studies are presented in two brothers with Niemann-Pick disease. The clinical features include hepatosplenomegaly and mental retardation without any other neurological signs. Roentgenograms of the chest showed bilateral diffuse reticular infiltration. The amounts of sphingomyelin and cholesterol in liver were increased, and sphingomyelinase activities in both liver and skin fibroblasts were markedly reduced in Case 1. Numerous foam cells and myelin figures were observed in the liver, kidneys, bone marrow, and lymph nodes on electron microscopical examination. These cases were regarded as a variant of Niemann-Pick disease from our investigations as they have mental retardation as an exceptional symptom when they are diagnosed as type B.
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PMID:Chronic Niemann-Pick disease with sphingomyelinase deficiency in two brothers with mental retardation. 20 52

A simple one-vial-method was developed for the quantitative determination of sphingomyelinase activity in human leukocytes and urine, using [14C-methyl] sphingomyelin. The measured activities of healthy control persons show a higher scatter in (n=50) urine (1.2 +/- 0.5 nmol/h . ml urine) than in (n=9) leukocytes (2.15 +/- 0.35 nmol/h . mg protein). Long term tests showed that the enzyme activities in urine can best be correlated to the 24-h-creatinine excretion. A distinct loss of enzyme activity was found in dialyzed urine starting at about the third day; this did not occur in undialyzed urine. The method also shows good reproducibility in micro-tests. It is therefore suitable for screening tests (urine of persons suffering from Niemann Pick disease) and for the prenatal diagnosis of sphingomyelinosis. For one out of two children with symptoms of sphingomyelinosis (hepatosplenomegaly, mental retardation, and neurological deterioration) the diagnosis was confirmed by morphological examination of tissues obtained by biopsy. In both cases leukocytes and urine revealed normal sphingomyelinase activity. These biochemical results in conjunction with the clinical and morphological picture were indicative of type C Niemann-Pick disease.
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PMID:An improved and simple micro-method of sphingomyelinase assay in leukocytes and urine. 21 Nov 76

A 12 year-old boy was referred because of general weakness, enuresis and pallor which had been present for at least six months. Previously, the child had been hospitalized at the age of five, because of mental retardation and hepatosplenomegaly, for which no cause could be found. He had severe renal insufficiency, with all the hallmarks of nephronophthisis. In addition his vision was very poor and fundoscopy revealed tapetoretinal degeneration. The liver and spleen were grossly enlarged. Liver function was almost completely normal, but histology showed diffuse periportal febrosis with profiferation of the bile ducts. This observation seems to confirm the existence of a new syndrome, associating nephronophthisis and liver fibrosis as described by Boichis and coworkers (1973).
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PMID:Nephronophthisis and tapetoretinal degeneration associated with liver fibrosis. 114 38

In recent years, several clinical and biochemical studies have been published contributing to better understanding of mucopolysaccharide storage diseases. Our purpose, therefore, is, to give an updated survey of this group of lysosomal diseases for diagnostic orientation to the pathologist. The present classification of mucopolysaccharidoses is based on a mixture of clinical symptoms, demonstration of enzyme defects, analysis of urinary excretion of glycosaminoglycans (mucopolysaccharides) and historical eponyms. A broad heterogeneity has been revealed: identical enzyme defects may lead to severe mental and physical deterioration and death during childhood or to mild forms with normal adult height, intelligence, and life expectancy. Conversely, identical phenotypes may result from mutations of different genes. Various types of mucopolysaccharidoses are mostly characterized by quantitative differences of main symptoms (coarse facial features, various skeletal abnormalities, hepatosplenomegaly, corneal clouding, mental retardation, and cardiac failure). Morphologically, storage material can be observed practically in all tissues by light and/or electron microscopy. Until recently, no more than palliative treatment could be offered. In the last decade, bone marrow transplantation has become available and may have beneficial effects in selected cases. The genes of several lysosomal enzymes have been identified, and comprehensive studies to introduce the gene into defective cells are currently undertaken. However, substantial efforts are still necessary until gene transfer will become available for patients with mucopolysaccharidoses.
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PMID:[Mucopolysaccharidoses. Genetics, clinical pathology, therapeutic regimes]. 152 34

Although rubella virus and cytomegalovirus (CMV) are important causes of congenital infections, information on their prevalence in our country is scarce. We studied a total of 249 infants suspected of having congenital infections from January 1988 to September 1989. Serum samples of these infants were tested for rubella and cytomegalovirus specific IgM antibodies by mucapture ELISA. Thirty (12%) infants were positive for rubella IgM antibody, and 50 (20%) had CMV specific IgM antibody. In the group presenting with hepatosplenomegaly (n = 56) rubella and CMV specific IgM antibodies were detected in 1 (1.7%) and 25 (44.6%) infants respectively. In the group presenting with congenital malformations (n = 90), 23 (25.5%) were positive for rubella, and only 9 (10%) had CMV IgM antibodies. Of the infants presenting with mental retardation (n = 39), only CMV infection was detected in 3 (7.7%) infants, whereas amongst the group showing intrauterine growth retardation (n = 16), 5 (31.25%) had CMV specific IgM antibodies and 2 (12.5%) had rubella specific IgM antibodies. In the miscellaneous group (n = 48), 4 (8.3%) and 8 (16.6%) infants had rubella and CMV IgM antibodies respectively. CMV infection was prevalent in a significantly higher number of children with hepatosplenomegaly than rubella while in infants with congenital malformations a significantly higher number had rubella infection. It is concluded that rubella and CMV infections are commonly seen in children with intrauterine infections in our population.
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PMID:Prevalence of rubella virus and cytomegalovirus infections in suspected cases of congenital infections. 165 69

We describe a 19-year-old white male with juvenile galactosialidosis. He presented with hip arthralgia and was found to have facial "coarseness," corneal clouding, mitral and aortic insufficiency, and hepatosplenomegaly. Ultrastructural studies of skin biopsy and peripheral blood lymphocytes showed membrane-bound inclusions containing sparse fibrillogranular material. Biochemical analysis showed elevated urinary sialyloligosaccharides and no free sialic acid. Fibroblast enzyme analysis showed low activities of both alpha-neuraminidase and beta-galactosidase. To date, most patients with juvenile galactosialidosis have been Japanese. However, unlike those patients, our patient did not have macular cherry-red spots, neurologic abnormalities, or mental retardation. We speculate that this young man represents a new subtype of juvenile galactosialidosis with a potentially different molecular defect from that of the Japanese variant.
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PMID:Juvenile galactosialidosis in a white male: a new variant. 314 49

Increased amounts of free sialic acid were found in body fluids, leukocytes, cultured fibroblasts, and liver tissue of a four-year-old boy with mental retardation, ataxia, and clinical and radiologic findings of a mild mucopolysaccharidosis. A diagnosis of Salla disease was made though in contrast to earlier reports, recurrent upper respiratory infections and hepatosplenomegaly were present already in infancy, and skeletal abnormalities of dysostosis multiplex were found in early childhood. Free sialic acid in the urine was identified as N-acetylneuraminic acid by 1H-NMR spectroscopy. Sialidase activities were normal. Increased amounts of bound sialic acid were found in liver and cultured fibroblasts and were attributed to an intracellular inhibition of sialyloligosaccharide-degrading neuraminidase by excessive amounts of free neuraminic acid. The molecular basis of N-acetylneuraminic acid storage disease is unknown but may be related to a defective transport mechanism preventing neuraminic acid from leaving the lysosomal compartment.
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PMID:N-Acetylneuraminic acid storage disease. 404 64

The effect on plasma fatty acid composition of 3-6 weeks feeding of standard diets supplemented with various omega 6 polyenoic fatty acids (18:2, 18:3, 20:3 or 20:4) was studied in two young brothers with multineuronal degeneration plus. These boys had mental retardation or maldevelopment, neurosensory hearing loss, retinitis pigmentosa, progressive muscular atrophy, hepatosplenomegaly and adrenal failure. The study objectives were to localize the site of metabolic block and to assess the safety and short-term clinical effect of dietary treatment. Our studies have shown that the low plasma levels of 20:4 omega 6 can be corrected by feeding ethyl arachidonate and that no adverse effects were experienced. A diet enriched in ethyl linoleate produced no obvious increases of 18:2 omega 6 metabolites, indicating that these patients do not have a linoleate deficiency in their omega 6 polyenoic fatty acid pathway. Lack of incorporation of 20:4 omega 6 and a retroconversion of 20:3 omega 6 to 18:2 omega 6 after a dihomo-gamma-linolenate-enriched diet suggest that a defect of delta 5 desaturase may be involved.
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PMID:Effects of polyunsaturated fatty acid diets on plasma lipids of patients with adrenomultineuronal degeneration, hepatosplenomegaly and fatty acid derangement. 666 79

A newborn baby presented with hyaline membrane disease, interstitial pneumonia, jaundice, hepatosplenomegaly, and unusual bone manifestations with lytic and sclerotic bone lesions and virtually absent periosteal reaction. He subsequently developed intracranial calcifications and mental retardation. The pneumonia and hepatosplenomegaly resolved. At the time of the delivery, a sibling was suffering from a severe undetermined viral infection. The clinical evolution of the disease and the radiologic findings led us to believe that this patient had a prenatal viral infection. The laboratory tests and the histologic picture of the bone biopsy supported the diagnosis.
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PMID:Unusual osteopathy in a newborn. 687 10


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