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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Five cases of supravalvular aortic stenosis (SAS) diagnosed by heart catheterization were studied in the Instituto Nacional de Cardiologia of Mexico. The clinic and laboratory data of interest of the differential diagnosis with other forms of obstruction of the left ventricle as follows: 1. Three cases had
mental retardation
and "elfin" face (SAS with specific psychophysical syndrome), the rest had a normal psyco-physical state without family antecedents (sporadic SAS). 2. The aortic focus was the epicenter of the expulsion murmur. In the phoncarodiographic study, two patients had protosistolic click and another had, in addition, a descending protodiastolic murmur (Int. I-IV). In the radial sphigmograms, one case had an amplitude difference in favor of the right side. 3. All had serum calcium figures within normal limits. 4. A chromosomatic analysis of preperipheral blood was performed on two patients, with normal results. 5. In the electrocardiogram, one case had right ventricular enlargement secondary to pulmonary arterial hypertension, due to stenosis of the main pulmonary arteries. 6. The radiologic study did not show dilatation of the ascending aorta and aortic bud in any case. 7. The angiocardiography showed: stenosis directly above the Valsalva sinuses; absence of dilatation or hypoplasia of the aorta above the stenosis; and the coronary network, indirectly opaqued, showed no abnormalities. One case had aortic coarctation and abnormal implantation of the right sublaviar artery, and another, stenosis of the right and left branch of its origen of the truncus of the pulmonary artery. The literature up to the present is reviewed and an anatomo-functional classification is proposed with the objective of including new varieties.
Arch Inst
Cardiol
Mex
PMID:[Supravalvular aortic stenosis. Report of clinical findings in 5 patients]. 113 53
Two male black patients, 18 and 12-year-old, with
mental retardation
and typical elfin face, presented with severe supravalvular aortic stenosis, thus characterizing Williams's or aortic supravalvular stenosis syndrome. Both were submitted to surgical treatment of the stenosis, and are asymptomatic after a one and four years follow-up. For the first time this syndrome, in its classical form, is described in black patients.
Arq Bras
Cardiol
1991 Oct
PMID:[Supravalvular aortic stenosis in two black patients]. 182 30
Tuberous sclerosis is a neurologic disease affecting various organs with a triade: sebaceum adenoma,
mental retardation
and seizures. This report presents a case of a patient with tuberous sclerosis and third degree A-V block with complete invasive and non-invasive evaluation. The patient had sincope and complete A-V block with QRS complexes showing right bundle branch block morphology. The echocardiogram showed dilated cardiomyopathy with diffuse left ventricular dysfunction and had normal coronary arteriography. The eletrophysiologic evaluation showed complete infra-hisian A-V block and QRS with left bundle branch block pattern with normal sinus nodal and A-V nodal function. It was not possible to induce ventricular tachtyarrhythmias up to two extrastimuli. Histologic study showed normal myocardium under light and electronic microscopy. After permanent VVI pacemaker implant, the patient in follow-up for 16 years. This case seems to be the first in the international medical literature of tuberous sclerosis with complete heart block.
Arq Bras
Cardiol
1989 Oct
PMID:[Total A-V block due to tuberous sclerosis. A case report]. 262 81
Deletion of the short arm of chromosome 18 produces a highly variable phenotype.
Mental retardation
, short stature, and an abnormal facies are invariably present. About 9% of patients with this syndrome have cardiac pathology.
Pediatr
Cardiol
1989
PMID:Heart disease associated with deletion of the short arm of chromosome 18. 267 18
Nonsyndromic familial supravalvular aortic stenosis is an autosomal dominant disorder. However, for many reported families, systematic study of all family members with echocardiographic or hemodynamic techniques has not been performed and degree of penetrance has not been assessed. The supravalvular stenosis in these family members usually is not associated with
mental retardation
or other characteristics of Williams syndrome. Although some believe that autosomal dominant supravalvular aortic stenosis is part of the spectrum of Williams syndrome, others believe that these are separate entities. Doppler echocardiograms were analyzed on 23 members of a 34 member family with several known to have supravalvular aortic stenosis; 20 studies were performed by the authors and 3 were done elsewhere and made available for review. No family member had
mental retardation
, characteristic facies or other findings of Williams syndrome. Three of the 34 had supravalvular aortic stenosis requiring surgery. Of 22 members examined echocardiographically who had not had prior surgical repair, 13 had supravalvular aortic stenosis. Echocardiographic findings ranged widely, from calcification of the ascending aorta in a 71 year old man with minimally increased flow velocity (1.7 m/s) to mild narrowing with mildly increased flow velocity in six members to significant narrowing with impressively increased flow velocity (2 to 4 m/s) in seven. In addition, four patients had mild narrowing of pulmonary artery branches and eight had peak pulmonary artery flow velocity above normal. This study demonstrates complete penetrance with extremely variable expression in this family with autosomal dominant supravalvular aortic stenosis and emphasizes the importance of using echocardiographic techniques in studying the family members who are suspected of having an inherited cardiovascular disease.
J Am Coll
Cardiol
1989 Feb
PMID:Spectrum of findings in a family with nonsyndromic autosomal dominant supravalvular aortic stenosis: a Doppler echocardiographic study. 291 19
The mucopolysaccharide storage diseases express themselves clinically with a wide variety of abnormalities, including growth and
mental retardation
, skeletal abnormalities, clouded corneas, nerve compression syndromes, upper airway obstruction and cardiovascular involvement, to name the most common. In most cases the cause of early death is cardiorespiratory failure secondary to cardiovascular involvement and upper airway obstruction. The findings of cardiac ultrasound examination in 29 children, adolescents and young adults are presented. In addition to the previously well-described abnormalities of the mitral and aortic valves in several types of mucopolysaccharide storage disease, we report patchy involvement in some cases, 3 instances of asymmetric septal hypertrophy not previously reported in mucopolysaccharide storage diseases, cardiac involvement in half of our patients with Sanfilippo syndrome and a lack of age-related severity of cardiac involvement even within the specific syndromes.
Am J
Cardiol
1988 Jan 01
PMID:Echocardiographic abnormalities in the mucopolysaccharide storage diseases. 312 47
One hundred patients, institutionalized for
mental retardation
, aged between 3 and 14 years (mean age 12.2 +/- 3) and free from cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases, were studied using Doppler technique (pulsed wave-continuous wave and color-coded Doppler), to evaluate the prevalence of pulmonary regurgitation. The authors, utilizing a triple method (diastolic turbulence above pulmonary valve detected by pulsed wave Doppler or diastolic flow detected by continuous wave Doppler, presence of regurgitant pulmonary color-jet, from short axis view, toward the right ventricular outflow tract, and presence of the same feature in the color m-multigate) to detect the presence or absence of pulmonary regurgitation found 73% positivity. There were no differences between the two sexes and the size of the pulmonary artery was in the normal range. The characteristics of regurgitation were: No holodiastolic. The regurgitant max velocity jet was not greater than 1.50 m/s. Beat to beat variability. Max length of color-jet was not more than 2 cm. Rapidly decreasing Doppler profile. We can conclude that pulmonary regurgitation is very frequent in children and is not significant if it has the above-named characteristics. This latter fact is further confirmed by other authors.
G Ital
Cardiol
1988 Nov
PMID:[Prevalence of pulmonary valve insufficiency in healthy children: a Doppler color study]. 326 56
This paper reports on two brothers affected by FG syndrome (a rare X-linked syndrome with multiple congenital anomalies and
mental retardation
) and subvalvular aortic stenosis of the discrete type. This is a previously unrecognized association. The FG syndrome was firstly described by Opitz and Kaveggia in 1974. Nearly 20 cases have been reported: congenital heart diseases previously reported are atrial septal defect, ventricular septal defect and hypoplastic left heart. The clinical appearance of the two cases we have observed was that of
mental retardation
and typical features including abnormal facies (dolicocephaly, frontal prominence, poorly modeled auricles, micrognathia, prominent lower lip and lack of expression), anteriorly displaced anal opening, clinodactyly, great broad toes. A chromosome study showed a normal 46 XY constitution. Discrete subvalvular aortic stenosis was diagnosed by typical physical and echocardiographic findings.
G Ital
Cardiol
1985 Mar
PMID:[The FG syndrome (McK 30545). Description of 2 cases with subaortic stenosis]. 404 Apr 87
Two patients with Multiple Lentiginosis (ML) had hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with severe obstruction of the right and left ventricular outflow tracts. ML is a rare syndrome in which there is a typical skin pigmentation disorder together with various other abnormalities like slight
mental retardation
, sensorineural deafness, genital and skeletal anomalies and sometimes a characteristic facies. Obstruction of the right ventricular outflow tract is frequent in such patients. The association of ML and obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy has been recently reported. A critical examination of the literature in addition to our clinical observations suggests that the biventricular obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy may play a major role in the clinical feature of ML syndrome.
G Ital
Cardiol
1983
PMID:[Multiple lentiginosis and hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy]. 622 88
Eleven patients, 10 male, with classic hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy and lentiginosis are described. Physical examination showed differences from the few previously reported cases in that (1) this condition was not confined to children; (2)
mental retardation
, sensorineural deafness and gonadal and somatic infantilism were either rare or absent; and (3) detailed family studies provided no evidence that this condition was inherited. Nine patients underwent cardiac catheterization and left ventricular angiography; all had left ventricular outflow obstruction and three had concomitant right ventricular outflow obstruction with a pressure gradient in excess of 100 mm Hg. Ten of the 11 patients were severely symptomatic, and 7, each with a left ventricular pressure gradient of more than 70 mm Hg, underwent successful septal myotomy/myectomy that resulted in marked symptomatic improvement that was maintained after long-term follow-up.
Am J
Cardiol
1981 Feb
PMID:Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy and lentiginosis: a little known neural ectodermal syndrome. 719 5
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