Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0025362 (mental retardation)
15,878 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 6-yr-old girl is described who presented with failure to thrive at age 3 months and was found to have mental retardation, growth retardation, disproportionately large head, distinctive face, abnormal hair, eczema, heart defect, splenomegaly, and multiple hemangiomata. She is thought to have the cardio-facio-cutaneous syndrome and to be the first such case identified in Britain.
...
PMID:A case of cardio-facio-cutaneous syndrome. 259 6

We report on two additional patients with the cardiofaciocutaneous (CFC) syndrome, the first to be reported outside the United States. They have several of the characteristic manifestations of this new multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation syndrome, namely, mental retardation, growth retardation, relative macrocephaly, unusual face, abnormal hair, skin involvement, heart defect, hernias, and splenomegaly. Similar to all previously reported cases, these also were sporadic and had normal chromosomes.
...
PMID:The CFC syndrome--report of the first two cases outside the United States. 342 95

This report describes two siblings, male and female, with a distinctive hereditary hepatorenal disorder. Review of the literature indicates that 11 cases have been reported outside the United States. The condition may first develop from early infancy to adolescence, and it is characterized in the great majority of instances by clinically severe renal disease. At some time in the course of the disease, hepatomegaly is present in all patients, and splenomegaly is common. Additional lesions and other abnormalities, including retinal lesions, mental retardation, cerebellar and osseous abnormalities, have been reported in some patients. Histologically, the renal lesion resembles nephronophthisis, and the hepatic lesion resembles congenital hepatic fibrosis. Mortality (due to the renal disease) is very high, and the longest-surviving patient was 14 years old at the time of death.
...
PMID:"Nephronophthisis-congenital hepatic fibrosis": an additional hepatorenal disorder. 710 36

Three unrelated children (one girl and two boys) have had since birth a syndrome characterized by a permanent skin rash which becomes more intense during flare-ups associated with fever, lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, and arthritis symmetrically involving the large joints. In one boy, typical psoriasis was observed at age 3 years. In two patients, roentgenograms of the joints showed early patellar ossification and an abnormal epiphyseal appearance. The three children also had neurologic involvement, with mental retardation, enlarged head circumference, eye lesions, late closure of the anterior fontanel, and a chronic meningitis with infiltration by polymorphonuclear cells. No immunologic abnormalities were found, but polymorphonuclear cells infiltrated the skin, lymph nodes, synovial fluid, and CSF.
...
PMID:Arthropathy with rash, chronic meningitis, eye lesions, and mental retardation. 725 69

Prolidase deficiency is a rare hereditary disorder with a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations including skin ulcers, eczematous eruptions, characteristic facies, mental retardation, splenomegaly, and susceptibility to infections. We report two new cases of prolidase deficiency. Our patients had the typical manifestations of prolidase deficiency. One also had lupus erythematosus. Prolidase activity was either normal or half-normal in all family members. The skin disease in our patients did not respond to topical glycine/proline ointment or to oral vitamin C.
...
PMID:Prolidase deficiency: a multisystemic hereditary disorder. 840 17

A 15-year-old boy was suffering from splenomegaly and a 10-year history of a neurologic disorder that included mental retardation, vertical supranuclear gaze palsy, dysarthria, ataxia, and dystonia. Bone marrow aspirates revealed foamy cells with storage materials which were positive with filipin staining. Cultured skin fibroblasts derived from the patient showed moderate loss of sphingomyelinase activity and the impairment of cholesterol esterification. The characteristic clinical presentations and typical histochemical findings of this patient met the diagnostic criteria of Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC). In the fibroblasts from the patient, there was an accumulation of GM2 ganglioside around their cytoplasms. Increased levels of glycolipids. including GM2 ganglioside are reported in the cerebral cortex of NPC, but not in the fibroblasts. The fibroblasts derived from NPC may reflect the abnormal metabolism of glycolipids in the central nervous system of NPC.
...
PMID:Increased levels of GM2 ganglioside in fibroblasts from a patient with juvenile Niemann-Pick disease type C. 954 79

Deficiency of prolidase, a key enzyme in proline metabolism, is extremely rare and is usually associated with skin lesions, recurrent infections, characteristic facies, mental retardation, and splenomegaly. These clinical features are largely due to inhibition of normal recycling of proline, which causes an alteration in the metabolism of collagen and other proline-rich proteins. The case of a 25-year-old with all the recognized characteristics of prolidase deficiency is reported. Pathologic myopia, which has not been hitherto described in association with prolidase deficiency, is added to the clinical spectrum of this rare disorder.
...
PMID:Prolidase deficiency associated with pathologic myopia. 958 29

Prolidase deficiency is a rare, inherited disorder characterized by ulceration of the skin, mental retardation, and massive urinary excretion of imidodipeptides. Most patients also have recurrent infections, an unusual facial appearance, and splenomegaly. We describe a girl presenting with chronic dermatitis, recurrent respiratory tract infections since her first months of life, and facial features characteristic of prolidase deficiency. The diagnosis of prolidase deficiency was made at 4.5 months of age. The immunologic study in this patient showed an extreme and progressive increase of total immunoglobulin E (IgE) in serum (reaching the value of 77,600 IU/l) and defective chemotactic function of the neutrophils. Treatment with a hyper-proteic diet supplemented with ascorbic acid, manganese chlorite, and topical proline resulted in reduction of the frequency and severity of the infections and significant improvement of the skin lesions. The authors discuss the immunologic alterations and the favorable evolution with treatment in this patient.
...
PMID:Prolidase deficiency with hyperimmunoglobulin E: a case report. 1200 Apr 88

Classic galactosemia is an autosomal recessive disorder that is caused by activity deficiency of the UDP-galactose uridyl transferase (GALT). The clinical spectrum of classic galactosemia differs according to the type and number of mutations in the GALT gene. Short-term clinical symptoms such as jaundice, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly and E. coli sepsis are typically associated with classic galactosemia. These symptoms are often severe but quickly ameliorate with dietary restriction of galactose. However, long-term symptoms such as mental retardation and primary ovarian failure do not resolve irrespective of dietary intervention or the period of initial dietary intervention. There seem to be an association between deficient galactosylation of cerebrosides and classic galactosemia. Galactocerebrosides and glucocerebrosides are the primary products of the enzyme UDP-galactose:cerebroside galactosyl transferase (CGT). There has been an observation of deficient galactosylation coupled with over glucosylation in the brain tissue specimens sampled from deceased classic galactosemia patients. The plausible mechanism with which the association between GALT and CGT had not been explained before. Yet, UDP-galactose serves as the product of GALT as well as a substrate for CGT. In classic galactosemia, there is a consistent deficiency in cerebroside galactosylation. We postulate that the molecular link between defective GALT enzyme, which result in classic galactosemia; and the cerebroside galactosyl transferase, which is responsible for galactosylation of cerebrosides is dependent on the cellular concentrations of UDP-galactose. We further hypothesize that a threshold concentration of UDP-galactose exist below which the integrity of cerebroside galactosylation suffers.
...
PMID:The molecular relationship between deficient UDP-galactose uridyl transferase (GALT) and ceramide galactosyltransferase (CGT) enzyme function: a possible cause for poor long-term prognosis in classic galactosemia. 1612 33

New metabolic diseases are regularly identified by a genetic or biochemical approach. Indeed, the metabolic diseases result from an enzymatic block with accumulation of a metabolite upstream to the block and deficit of a metabolite downstream. The characterization of these abnormal metabolites by MRI spectroscopy permitted to identify the deficient enzyme in two new groups of diseases, creatine deficiencies and polyol anomalies. Creatine deficiency is implicated in unspecific mental retardation. A low peak of creatine at MRI spectroscopy is evocating of creatine deficiency which is treatable by creatine administration. Deficiency of synthesis of polyols, metabolites on the pentose pathway, represent new described metabolic diseases with variable symptoms including a neurological distress, liver disease, splenomegaly, cutis laxa and renal insufficiency. The deficit of ribose-5-phosphate isomerase, one of the enzymes whose diagnosis is evoked in front of the accumulation of ribitol, arabitol and xylitol leads to a leucodystrophy in adults. This new deficit was highlighted by the identification of an abnormal peak in cerebral MRI-spectroscopy corresponding to the abnormal accumulation of polyols in brain. Congenital hyperinsulinism (HI) is characterized by profound hypoglycaemia related to inappropriate insulin secretion. Focal and diffuse forms of hyperinsulinism share a similar clinical presentation but their treatment is dramatically different. Until recently, preoperative differential diagnosis was based on pancreatic venous sampling, an invasive and technically demanding technique. Positron emission tomography (PET) after injection of [18F]Fluoro-L-DOPA has been evaluated for the preoperative differentiation between focal and diffuse HI, by imaging uptake of radiotracer and the conversion of [18F]Fluoro-L-DOPA into dopamine by DOPA decarboxylase. PET with [18F]Fluoro-L-DOPA has been validated as a reliable test to differentiate diffuse and focal HI and is now a major differential diagnosis tool in infantile hyperinsulinemic hypoglycaemia.
...
PMID:[Radiological innovations in the screening and diagnosis of the inborn errors of metabolism]. 1627 50


1 2 3 Next >>