Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis is one of a group of rare diseases termed hereditary sensory-motor neuropathies. Primary clinical features of this entity include congenital analgesia, inability to sweat, and
mental retardation
. Besides the rarity of these clinical entities, difficulty in evaluating the sensory disturbances, especially in small children, makes the diagnosis a clinical problem. In this article a 3-year-old boy, with consanguineous parents and no family history of the disorder, who was evaluated for two years because of ulcerating lesions on his knees, is presented. Physical examination revealed deep ulceration on his knees and scars from burns on his neck and scalp. Moderate mental retardation and analgesia were noted. There was symmetrical loss of pain and touch sensation on his hands and feet. Electromyographic examination showed absence of action potentials of the ulnar and sural nerves, decrease in the sensory and motor nerve conduction velocities, and amplitude of action potentials. The result of the application of pilocarpine showed anhidrosis.
His
skin and nerve biopsy specimens were also examined.
...
PMID:Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis. 934 32
A 16-year-old boy with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy had seizures, short stature, muscle weakness, progressive hearing loss,
mental retardation
, and myoclonus.
His
cranial computed tomography showed progressive calcification in the basal ganglia and cerebral atrophy. Muscle biopsy revealed many ragged-red fibers with variable cytochrome c oxidase activity and some strongly succinate dehydrogenase-reactive blood vessels. Sequence analysis of the entire mitochondrial DNA revealed a novel point mutation in the tRNA-Thr gene at nucleotide pair 15915. Serum lactate levels were decreased by high-dose coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) therapy. The spectral power density, a parameter of background activity on electroencephalography, was markedly improved after additional administration of idebenone. After initiation of combined CoQ10 and idebenone therapy, the clinical abnormalities did not progress for 16 months.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with 15915 mutation: clinical report. 936 99
The fragile X syndrome phenotype of
mental retardation
is almost always caused by abnormal CGG trinucleotide amplification within the FMR1 gene. Occasionally fragile X syndrome results from point mutations or deletions within or around the FMR1 locus. We have identified a mentally retarded African American male with typical fragile X phenotype and a 300-400 base pair intragenic deletion near the CGG repeat segment, present in his peripheral blood lymphocytes with no apparent mosaicism.
His
mother, who is not retarded, has a full FMR1 CGG expansion mutation with 700-900 repeats. A review of 23 published cases with FMR1 gene deletions shows full FMR1 mutation in the mother of only 1 other propositus, a male with FMR1 full mutation/premutation/deletion mosaicism of his cultured skin fibroblasts and peripheral blood lymphocytes. The various deletions within FMR1 and their clinical significance are reviewed.
...
PMID:Fragile X syndrome and deletions in FMR1: new case and review of the literature. 937 26
The oculocerebrorenal syndrome of Lowe (OCRL) is an X-linked multisystem disorder with major abnormalities of eyes, nervous system, and kidneys. Clinical manifestations include congenital cataract,
mental retardation
, and renal tubular dysfunction. A gene (OCRL1) responsible for OCRL was identified by positional cloning and its product OCRL-1 protein was shown to be a phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate [PtdIns(4,5)P2] 5-phosphatase localized to the Golgi apparatus. We describe three mutations in OCRL1, one in a patient with severe phenotype and two in patients with moderate phenotype (degree of
mental retardation
and musculoskeletal abnormalities). The patient with severe phenotype had a G-to-A transition at nucleotide (nt) 1,739, causing an Arg-to-Gln substitution at amino acid 577, and one patient with moderate phenotype had a C-to-G transversion at nt 1,812, leading to a
His
-to-Gln substitution at amino acid 601. Both Arg-577 and
His
-601 are encoded by exon 15 and are probably important for proper function of this protein, since these are conserved in various enzymes catalyzing dephosphorylation of inositol compounds. In the other patient with the moderate phenotype, there was a G-to-A transition at nt 2,797 located at the 3'-end of exon 22. This substitution led to a skip of the same exon as well as conversion of codon-930 from GCT (Ala) to ACT (Thr) in the normal-size transcript. When we measured the enzyme activity in skin fibroblasts from the three patients, the activity was less than 10%, compared to findings in normal controls. Western blot analysis showed absence or severe decrease in OCRL-1 protein in cell lysates derived from these patients.
...
PMID:Oculocerebrorenal syndrome of Lowe: three mutations in the OCRL1 gene derived from three patients with different phenotypes. 963 63
We report an 11-year-old boy with a non-photosensitive epileptic self-induced seizures, pacygyria and familial ataxia.
His
grandmother and aunts had dysarthria, and his mother had developed progressive ataxia and myoclonus since 40 years old.
His
older sister had ataxia,
mental retardation
and epilepsy. As for the boy, motor developmental delay with muscle hypertonicity of left extremities was recognized at the age of 5 months.
Mental retardation
and ataxia was recognized at the age of 3 years and slight mental regression is recognized at the age of 11 years. No special findings were detected in an examination of his blood and cerebrospinal fluid, including amino acids, lysosomal enzymes activity and genetic analysis for dentatorubralpallidoluysian atrophy. Brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed pachygyria of the right cerebral cortecies. At the age of two, he began to induce seizures with impairment of consciousness in himself by waving his right hand over his face which was directed toward a source of bright light. At the age of seven, he developed spontaneous seizures with impairment of consciousness. An EEG showed frequent spikes in the occipital areas, on the right and left sides occurring either independently or synchronously. Intermittent photic stimulation and pattern stimulation did not induce a paroxysmal discharge in EEG. Ictal EEG suggested that the origin of the seizures was the occipital lobe. Treatment with valporate and zonisamide was effective in reducing the seizures. The findings of our case imply the pathogenesis of self-induced seizures and the relationship between PME and neuronal migration disorders.
...
PMID:[A case of non-photosensitive, self-induced epileptic seizures with pacygyria]. 978 Jul 45
A Japanese male with mosaicism of ring chromosome 14 and chromosome 14 monosomy is described. He demonstrated the characteristic morphologic features of ring chromosome 14, in addition to
mental retardation
and epileptic seizures. Clusters of complex partial seizures, one of which originated in the left frontocentral region on electroencephalographic monitoring, were evident.
His
seizures responded to phenobarbital, and his mental and motor development was only mildly retarded. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a hypoplastic corpus callosum, previously unknown in association with this syndrome.
...
PMID:Ring chromosome 14 complicated with complex partial seizures and hypoplastic corpus callosum. 1002 66
Important symptoms of tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), an autosomal dominant disorder, are hamartomata in several organs,
mental retardation
and epilepsy. Either one of two loci can be involved (TSC1 and TSC2), of which the TSC2 gene has been cloned. To date, only 35 mutations in the TSC2 gene have been described ranging from large deletions to point mutations. Southern blot analysis using cDNA clones of the TSC2 gene was performed on a cohort of 160 unrelated TSC patients and revealed a 10 kb insertion. The insertion was also present in DNA of the affected father. Both patients showed renal angiomyolipoma, hypomelanotic macules and epilepsy. SSCP analysis of exons 1,2,3,9,12,14,30a and 36 identified two mutations in exon 30a: 3671del8 and S1221X. Symptoms of the sporadic patient with the 3671del8 mutation are cortical tubers, subependymal nodules, facial angiofibroma, ungual fibroma, renal angiomyolipoma, hypomelanotic macules, epilepsy and
mental retardation
. Clinical symptoms of the patient with the S1221X mutation are facial angiofibroma, ungual fibroma, hypomelanotic macules, epilepsy and
mental retardation
.
His
parents were negative for the S1221X mutation, although a germline mosaicism can not be excluded. Besides the previously described polymorphism 1596C->T, two rare variants were observed, a substitution of C->T at position 1294 and at position 1299 C->A.
...
PMID:Identification of a large insertion and two novel point mutations (3671del8 and S1221X) in tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) patients. Mutations in brief no. 119. Online. 1021 7
The congenital muscular dystrophies (CMDs) are a heterogeneous group of disorders. Among these, the laminin alpha 2 chain 'merosin' deficient CMD is caused by mutations of the LAMA2 gene on chr 6q2 and Fukuyama CMD is linked to chr 9q31. We report a 7-year-old boy who was born to consanguineous healthy parents.
His
motor and mental development were slow. Creatine kinase (CK) was elevated (2.100 U/l), and the muscle biopsy was dystrophic. He sat unsupported at 12 months and took his first steps at 3 years of age. At 6 years of age he could walk up to 500 m. He was mentally retarded and spoke single words only. At 1 year, MR imaging of the brain showed abnormal increased periventricular T2-signal, consistent with dysmyelination as well as pontocerebellar hypoplasia and several cerebellar cysts. The pattern of gyration was normal. Follow-up at 4 years showed normalization of the previously abnormal periventricular T2-signal. Immunohistochemical analysis of the skeletal muscle showed normal expression of laminin alpha 2 for a C-terminal antibody and antibodies to the 300 and 150 kDa fragments, as well as of laminins alpha 5, beta 1, beta 2 and gamma 1. The boy has two healthy younger brothers. Linkage analysis excluded the candidate loci on chromosomes 6q2 and 9q31. As such, the patient's data are suggestive of a new form of laminin alpha 2 positive CMD characterized by transient brain dysmyelination, pontocerebellar hypoplasia and
mental retardation
.
...
PMID:Merosin-positive congenital muscular dystrophy with transient brain dysmyelination, pontocerebellar hypoplasia and mental retardation. 1022 Aug 64
When I was in medical school, Douglas Power Murphy, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, told us of his inexpensive, simple study of "microcephaly" and
mental retardation
in newborn infants whose mothers had received therapeutic radiation early in pregnancy.
His
review of the literature and mail inquiry of other obstetrics centers in the United States revealed 14 published cases (Murphy, '28) and 16 unpublished (Goldstein and Murphy, '29). Here am I, 52 years later, still updating his findings.
...
PMID:Discussion: severe mental retardation and cancer among atomic bomb survivors exposed in utero. 1033 25
An 11-year-old boy affected by
mental retardation
and seizures demonstrates congenital heart defect, many dysmorphic features and dry skin.
His
hair is sparse over the vertex with alopecia of the eyebrows and eyelashes. There are horny small papules evident in those areas. The diagnosis of cardiofaciocutaneous syndrome has been made. The relationship between cardiofaciocutaneous and Noonan syndrome is discussed.
...
PMID:Cardiofaciocutaneous (CFC) syndrome. 1033 26
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>