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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recent observations are considered to provide further evidence for an abnormality involving motoneurones in
DMD
. The dystrophic process appears to take place in two stages of which the first occurs during early embryonic life. This stage is thought to involve faulty inductive actions of the neural tube upon mesoderm and upon itself. The neural consequences vary among individuals and are manifested as
mental retardation
; EEG abnormalities and losses of functioning motor units. While the first two abnormalities are non-progressive, a further loss of motor units, associated with striking reductions in the numbers of excitable muscle fibers, takes place in trunk and large limb muscles at 9--12 years. The latter process, the cause of which is uncertain, constitutes the second stage of
DMD
.
...
PMID:The neural hypothesis of muscular dystrophy. A review of recent experimental evidence with particular reference to the Duchenne form. 66 46
We report the results of screening for molecular deletions in 164 boys with
DMD
and BMD and correlation of deletions with clinical features. A deletion was detected in 100 cases (61%) by Southern blot hybridization analysis with cDNA probes. Thirty-eight different deletions and two duplications were identified. All deletions except one (deletion of exons 48-53) found in males with
DMD
disrupted the translational reading frame of the gene; however, six deletions in boys with BMD were out of frame. The same deletion in different individuals was found to occur with or without mental impairment, and many different deletions were associated with
mental retardation
. We were able to ascertain a series of boys [from this study and a previous one (Hodgson S V, Hart K, Abbs S, et al. Correlation of clinical and deletion data in Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy. J Med Genet 1989; 26: 682-693)] without significant
mental retardation
who had deletions which, when combined, covered the whole region of the gene in which deletions are commonly found, and within which region individual deletions can be associated with
mental retardation
.
...
PMID:Correlation of clinical and deletion data in Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy, with special reference to mental ability. 148 53
A total of 162 Duchenne (
DMD
) patients and two girls with a
DMD
phenotype were analysed for deletions in the central region of the dystrophin gene in order to determine if there was a correlation between
mental retardation
(MR) and the pattern of deletion. Approximately 43% of the patients studied had deletions with two dystrophin cDNAs, cf23a and cf56a, and among 148 patients who were mentally assessed, 50% were mentally retarded. The average IQ in the group of patients with DNA deletions did not differ significantly from those patients with no detectable deletions. However, six unrelated
DMD
boys with MR showed an identical pattern of deletion. Our observations in the group of patients who had detected DNA deletions suggest that exon 52 of the dystrophin gene may be functionally significant in the manifestation of MR: 70% (19/27) of patients with a deletion of this exon were mentally retarded, whereas only 38% (15/39) of MR patients had deletions not involving exon 52. This difference was statistically significant.
...
PMID:Apparent association of mental retardation and specific patterns of deletions screened with probes cf56a and cf23a in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. 187 22
Cloned cDNA sequences representing exons from the Duchenne/Becker muscular dystrophy (DMD/BMD) gene were used for deletion screening in a population of 287 males males affected with
DMD
or BMD. The clinical phenotypes of affected boys were classified into three clinical severity groups based on the age at which ambulation was lost. Boys in group 1 had
DMD
, losing ambulation before their 13th birthday; those in group 2 had disease of intermediate severity, losing ambulation between the ages of 13 and 16 years; and boys in group 3 had BMD, being ambulant beyond 16 years. A fourth group consisted of patients too young to be classified. Clinical group allocation was made without previous knowledge of the DNA results. A gene deletion was found in 124 cases where the clinical severity group of the affected boy was known. The extent of the deletions was delineated using cDNA probes. There were 74 different deletions. Fifty-five of these were unique to individual patients, but the other 19 were found in at least two unrelated patients. The different clinical groups showed generally similar distributions of deletions, and the number of exon bands deleted (that is, deletion size) was independent of phenotype. Some specific deletion types, however, correlated with the clinical severity of the disease. Deletion of exons containing HindIII fragments 33 and 34 and 33 to 35 were associated with BMD and were not found in patients with
DMD
. Deletions 3 to 7 occurred in four patients with the intermediate phenotype and one patient with BMD. Other shared deletions were associated with
DMD
, although in four cases patients with disease of intermediate severity apparently shared the same deletion with boys with
DMD
. The range of phenotypes observed, and the overlap at the genetic level between severe and intermediate and mild and intermediate forms of dystrophy, emphasizes the essential continuity of the clinical spectrum of
DMD
/BMD. There were no characteristic deletions found in boys with
mental retardation
or short stature which differed from deletions in affected boys without these features.
...
PMID:Correlation of clinical and deletion data in Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy. 258 68
We have studied 30 French patients with X-linked muscular dystrophy of the Duchenne (
DMD
) and Becker (BMD) types for intragenic deletions, using the cDNA probes of the
DMD
/BMD gene. Sixteen patients (53%) had molecular deletions in one or several of the 65 Hind III fragments containing exons detected with the DNA probes; in four deletion cases junction, fragments of altered size were seen. Fourteen (87%) of the deletions were detected using only two (1-2a and 8) and fifteen with 8+(2b-3) of the cDNA subclones. In our limited sample, BMD was caused by deletions in the 5' end of the gene, and in two instances of
DMD
, deletions of similar types resulted in diseases of similar severity. Of two patients with
mental retardation
, both had deletions comprised exons contained in probe 8, but other patients without
mental retardation
are also deleted with probe 8. We conclude that cDNA hybridization studies provide a powerful diagnostic tool in
DMD
and BMD families.
...
PMID:Molecular deletion patterns in Duchenne muscular dystrophy patients. 261 Apr 87
X-linked
DMD
is a serious condition characterized by progressive muscle wasting and weakness and death ensues in the late teens or early twenties. There is considerable clinical variability even within families and some suggestions of genetic heterogeneity. Though skeletal muscle is primarily involved, other tissues are also affected including cardiac and smooth muscle. Other abnormalities include
mental retardation
, thymus hyperplasia and possibly certain endocrinological changes. The responsible locus is at Xp21 and the gene product is a very large protein (dystrophin) which is normally localised to muscle cell membranes. It is hypothesised that its absence in
DMD
may result in instability of the muscle cell membrane with resultant ingress of calcium, an increase in intracellular calcium, and cell death. An understanding of this pathway is important in devising an effective treatment.
...
PMID:Clinical and molecular studies in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. 266 10
Of the approximately 170 families with X-linked muscular dystrophy of the Duchenne (
DMD
) and Becker (BMD) type in Finland, we have studied 90 unrelated patients for intragenic deletions by using the cDNA probes described by Koenig et al. Forty-five patients (50%) had molecular deletions of one or several of the 65 exon-containing HindIII fragments. In six deletion cases junction fragments of altered size were seen. Thirty-eight (84%) of the 45 deletions were detected using only two (1-2a and 8) of the six cDNA subclones. Using a wheelchair age of 12 years to distinguish between
DMD
and BMD, we found that the proportions of patients with deletions were similar. Deletions were equally common in familial and sporadic disease. BMD was more commonly caused by deletions in the 5' end of the gene than was
DMD
. In at least three instances deletions of similar type resulted in diseases of similar severity. Of 14 patients with
mental retardation
seven had deletions; six of these comprised exons contained in probe 8. We conclude that cDNA hybridization studies provide a powerful diagnostic tool in
DMD
and BMD and that they promise to produce better insights into molecular-clinical correlations.
...
PMID:Gene deletions in X-linked muscular dystrophy. 292 94
A balanced de novo (X;9) translocation was observed in a patient with progressive muscular dystrophy of Duchenne's type (
DMD
), Turner's syndrome, epilepsy and
mental retardation
. The involvement of the paternal X is suggested. The assignment of the gene locus for
DMD
is confirmed on Xp21.
...
PMID:Turner's syndrome and Duchenne muscular dystrophy in a girl with an X; autosome translocation. 633 82
The authors collected Verbal, Performance and Full-scale IQs for 74 patients in whom complete analysis of the dystrophin gene for deletions and duplications had been performed. There was a significant difference in the mean Full-scale IQ between patients with deletions at the 5' and 3' ends of the gene, with no patients with 5' deletions having
mental retardation
. No relationship was established between
mental retardation
and the presence or absence of deletions or length of deletions, and similar deletions were observed in the presence and absence of
mental retardation
. Although distal deletions were more commonly associated with
mental retardation
, there was no clear evidence for a particular region of the dystrophin gene being specifically responsible for IQ. The intellectual deficit seen in
DMD
may be a consequence of cerebral hypoxia, ue to malfunction of smooth muscle dystrophin.
...
PMID:Deletion status and intellectual impairment in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. 789 Jan 31
We have previously reported linkage analysis in 3 families with non-specific X-linked
mental retardation
(XLMR). This used RFLPs and was limited by the relatively low informativeness and density of markers available. We have performed a new linkage analysis using microsatellites (including new Genethon markers) in the two most informative families. In the MRX2 family, a lod score of 2.61 at theta = 0.05 had previously been obtained with DXS85 in Xp22.2. We now report a tighter linkage with AFM 135xe7 (DXS989, z = 4.62 at theta = 0.00) and established the order DXS85-DXS207-DXS999 (AFM234 y12)-MRX2, DXS365, DXS1052 (AFM 163yh2), DXS989-DXS1065 (AFM224zf2),
DMD
3'. The localization of MRX2 in Xp22.2-p22.1 is thus clearly different from the more distal MRX gene defined by patients with contiguous gene syndromes. In the MRX4 family, a maximum lod score of 2.53 at theta = 0.00 had been obtained with DXS159 in Xq13. Our present study did not show recombination from ALAS2 in Xp11.21 to DXS441 in Xq13.3 (z = 3.38 at theta = 0.00 for the latter marker) and the closest flanking markers are DXS255 in Xp11.22 and DXYS1 in Xq21.3. Reduced recombination around the centromere prevents precise mapping. The localisation of MRX4 overlaps with that of several other MRX families.
...
PMID:Non-specific X-linked mental retardation: linkage analysis in MRX2 and MRX4 families revisited. 794 41
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