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)

We report a further case of trisomy 4p: a 5-year-old mentally retarded boy with characteristic facial features, eye abnormalities, flexion contractures, several bone anomalies, and hyperactivity. In a review of 27 cases (11 male, 16 female, 22 families) the cytogenetic and clinical data were tabulated and analyzed. Diagnosis is established by karyotype: there is always partial or apparently "total" trisomy of the short term arm of chromosome 4. In 19 families a parent carried either a balanced translocation (16 times) or a pericentric inversion (3 times); 3 patients had de novo duplication of 4p. In several cases, additional deletions or trisomies were present. From the analysis of all cases, but particularly of the "pure" trisomies, the phenotypic spectrum of this condition was observed and found to be a specific multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome. Its main features are a characteristic facial appearance, postnatal growth retardation, severe psychomotor retardation with or without seizures, microcephaly, and various major and minor anomalies.
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PMID:The trisomy 4p syndrome: case report and review. 41 13

We have evaluated four individuals from two unrelated families with a similar multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome due to partial duplication of chromosome 1q and possible deletion 18p. In both families the mothers and several relatives were carriers of the balanced translocation rcp t(1;18) (q42;p11). The features which the four have in common are relative macrocephaly, prominent forehead, micrognathia, and highly arched palate; three of the four individuals have short stature, scoliosis, kyphosis, hirsutism, camptodactyly, sacral dimple, repaired inguinal hernias, and eye abnormalities. Reproductive histories of five balanced translocation carriers in these families indicate that they have a high risk of spontaneous abortions and infants with multiple malformations.
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PMID:Multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome due to partial 1q duplication and possible 18p deletion: a study of four individuals in two families. 49 50

We report 5 new cases of the FG syndrome, 1 sporadic, 3 brothers from a European family, and another affected male born in the first FG syndrome family reported by Opitz and Kaveggia in 1974. The pedigree data confirm the hypothesis of X-linked inheritance of this multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome. Its manifestations include shortness of stature with a disproportionately large head, mental retardation, hypotonia with or without congenital joint contractures, seizures and a strikingly characteristic personality of facial appearance, imperforate anus and/or orthe gastrointestinal defects, congenital heart defects, and many minor manifestations. Chronic pulmonary disease in some affected males may be a complication of hypotonia.
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PMID:The FG syndrome: further characterization, report of a third family, and of a sporadic case. 56 38

Etiology and pathogenesis of MCA/MR in 1,023 patients (618 male; 405 female) with mental retardation were studied. Of 1,023 patients, there were 563 cases (317 male; 246 female) with MCA (55%). Among the MCA patients, there were 303 (156 male; 147 female) whose primary etiology was clarified (53.8%). Among the 260 patients with MCA/MR of unknown etiology, there were 23 with recognizable syndromes of unknown etiology and 7 previously reported by us as possibly having a new malformation syndrome. We had 569 patients with mental retardation of unknown etiology including 263 (41.5%) who were involved with MCA.
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PMID:Etiologic and pathogenetic study of mental retardation with multiple congenital anomalies. 137 60

A previously unreported X-linked MCA/MR syndrome is described in 4 members of a large family. Phenotypic manifestations include mental retardation, microcephaly, failure to thrive, severe congenital hypotonia, characteristic face, hypogenitalism, pachygyria. This appears to be an X-linked dominant trait with decreased penetrance and expressivity in carrier females.
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PMID:New XLMR syndrome with characteristic face, hypogenitalism, congenital hypotonia and pachygyria. 160 25

The syndrome: We describe 3 Brazilian brothers presenting a cluster of signs strongly suggesting a "new" MCA/MR syndrome. The main clinical signs include short stature, microbrachycephaly, mental retardation, palpebral ptosis, coloboma of iris and retina, nystagmus, strabismus, and cleft lip/palate. This is either an autosomal or X-linked recessive trait.
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PMID:Short stature, mental retardation, eye anomalies, and cleft lip/palate. 160 26

A boy with MCA/MR and a fragile site (FS) at 8q22 opens the discussion of a possible association between a rare autosomal FS and an abnormal phenotype. The child was born after prenatal diagnosis of ureterohydronephrosis. He had facial dysmorphia and mental retardation (IQ = 40). The karyotype showed 8q22 FS in 12% of the cells obtained after addition of FUdR to the culture medium. No other etiologic factor was shown to be responsible for the MCA/MR syndrome. Several authors have reported a variety of neurodevelopmental abnormalities and mental retardation in individuals with rare FS expressed on chromosomes 2, 9, 10, 16 and 19. If rare FS predispose to phenotypic abnormalities what are the mechanisms?
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PMID:Are some multiple congenital anomalies with mental retardation (MCA/MR) the clinical expression of rare autosomal fragile sites? 179 18

We report on two half-brothers with the FG syndrome which is an X-linked recessive multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome. Both patients show postnatal short stature and an altogether characteristic face consisting of droopy appearance, macrocephaly, frontal upsweep, hypertelorism, full lower lip, retrognathia, and dysmorphic ears. Moreover, since early infancy both have a tendency towards constipation, their muscle tone is low and psychomotor development is moderately retarded. Minor expression of this syndrome in the patients' mother and her two mentally retarded brothers give additional support to the X-linked nature of the condition. On the basis of the pertinent literature, a concise description of this MCA/MR syndrome with variable expression is given. Diagnostic evaluation of dysmorphic male patients with psychomotor retardation should always consider the FG syndrome which has been known since 1974 but still is inadequately recognised in the German literature.
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PMID:[FG syndrome in 2 half brothers]. 196 Dec 7

We report on an Arabic sibship originating from Morocco in which four children manifest an undiagnosed sublethal multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome of intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR), microcephaly, large soft pinnae, telecanthus or true hypertelorism with squint, flat face, unusual hooked nose, very narrow mouth, retrognathia, and extremely severe neurologic impairment. One child was stillborn. Three others died in a cachectic state during their second year. One child had a severe cerebral malformation compatible with semilobar holoprosencephaly. Other inconstant manifestations are anterior chamber cleavage defect, preaxial polydactyly of feet, interventricular septal defect, and atresia of the external auditory meatus. Autosomal recessive inheritance is likely.
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PMID:Lambotte syndrome: microcephaly, holoprosencephaly, intrauterine growth retardation, facial anomalies, and early lethality--a new sublethal multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation syndrome in four sibs. 224 28

We describe a new multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome in chromosomally normal sibs. Both had microcephaly, a "coarse" face with synophrys, ear anomalies, type B brachydactyly, nail dysplasia, skeletal anomalies, dwarfism, and mental retardation. Their mother had nail dysplasia, mild mental retardation, and short stature. An uncle, a younger brother of the mother, died at 17 years of age and also had a "coarse" face, digital anomalies, dwarfism, and severe mental retardation. The malformation complex in this family apparently has not been described previously, and the manifestations of the patients do not correspond to those of any known malformation syndrome. The disorder may be attributable to the pleiotropic effect of an autosomal dominant or an X-linked semidominant gene.
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PMID:A new syndrome of dwarfism, brachydactyly, nail dysplasia, and mental retardation in sibs. 233 12


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