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)

There is evidence for the occurrence of psychopathological symptoms in the adult form of myotonic dystrophy such as disturbance of concentration and memory, chronic depression, disturbed social behaviour, mental retardation, and hypersomnia. In this report we present a patient suffering from multisystemic myotonic myopathy without a cytosine-thymine-guanine [corrected] repeat expansion on chromosome 19q13.3 and schizophrenia. In this patient, a severe increase of creatine kinase (CK) occurred during treatment with olanzapine and amisulpride. The following risperidone medication was well tolerated without side effects. Susceptibility for malignant hyperthermia was detected by a positive in vitro contracture test. The occurrence of elevated muscle enzymes during treatment with atypical neuroleptics is suspicious as a possible side effect of neuroleptic medication and muscle disease.
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PMID:[Incompatibility of olanzapine and amisulpride in multisystemic myotonic myopathy]. 1157 7

Pediatric neurologic diseases are often associated with different kinds of sleep disruption (mainly insomnia, less frequently hypersomnia or parasomnias). Due to the key-role of sleep for development, the effort to ameliorate sleep patterns in these children could have important prognostic benefits. Study of sleep architecture and organization in neurologic disorders could lead to a better comprehension of the pathogenesis and a better treatment of the disorders. This article focuses on the following specific neurologic diseases: nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy and abnormal motor behaviors of epileptic origin, evaluating differential diagnosis with parasomnias; achondroplasia, confirming the crucial role of craniofacial deformity in determining sleep-disordered breathing; neuromuscular diseases, mainly Duchenne's muscular dystrophy and myotonic dystrophy; cerebral palsy, evaluating either the features of sleep architecture and the importance of the respiratory problems associated; headaches, confirming the strict relationships with sleep in terms of neurochemical and neurobehavioral substrates; and finally a review on the effectiveness of melatonin for sleep problems in children with neurologic syndromes and mental retardation, blindness, and epilepsy.
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PMID:Sleep disorders in children with neurologic diseases. 1176 88

Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS) is a genetic disorder characterized by hypotonia, mental retardation or learning disability, hyperphagia and compulsive eating due to hypothalamic dysfunction. Obesity is a major cause of increased morbidity and mortality among patients with PWS. Gastric restrictive surgery has been associated with partial breakdown of the staple-line in PWS. We report two patients with PWS associated with morbid obesity and obstructive sleep apnea who underwent biliopancreatic diversion (BPD). A 27-year-old male with BMI 52 kg/m(2) and a 20 year-old female with BMI 64 kg/m(2) underwent BPD. No perioperative complications were observed. After BPD, the male's BMI was 36.7 kg/m(2) at 12 months and the female's BMI was 48.4 kg/m(2) at 28 months, with excess weight loss 58% and 48%, respectively. They developed loose stools associated with eating. These patients have shown a considerable improvement in hypersomnia and respiratory difficulties. BPD proved to be an effective approach to weight loss in PWS, resulting in improvement of sleep apnea, behavior problems and quality of life.
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PMID:Results of biliopancreatic diversion in two patients with Prader-Willi syndrome. 1597 69

Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a genetically determined neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by mental retardation and distinct physical, behavioral, and psychiatric features. Based on parents' questionnaires, we examined the prevalence of behavioral and psychiatric disorders of 165 persons with PWS aged 2-31 years in Japan. The data were analyzed comparing four different age groups with PWS: group 1, 2-5 years (n=34); group 2, 6-11 years (n=57); group 3, 12-17 years (n=45); and group 4, 18-31 years (n=29). Further, we compared the results of our PWS group 4 with those of 42 age-, gender-, and intelligence level-matched intellectual disability (ID) individuals without PWS. Our results showed that repetitive speech and stubbornness were prominent from early childhood and other behavioral problems such as hyperphagia, stealing food, temper tantrums, lying, and emotional lability tended to be more frequent with age among persons with PWS. Moreover, young adults with PWS have significantly higher rates of behavioral and psychiatric disorders than IDs without PWS, such as stubbornness, hyperphagia, temper tantrums, self-injurious behavior (skin picking), hypersomnia, inactivity, and delusion. Degree of obesity was not necessarily related to behavioral and psychiatric features associated with PWS. Our findings revealed that persons with PWS are more vulnerable to behavioral and psychiatric disorders particularly in young adulthood compared to those with ID from other etiologies in Japan.
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PMID:Behavioral and psychiatric disorders in Prader-Willi syndrome: a population study in Japan. 1731 21