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)

A pedigree is presented in which an apparently unaffected man transmitted the gene for X-linked mental retardation to at least four of his 12 daughters. None of his 12 sons was mentally retarded. These findings may be explained by a somatic mutation and germinal mosaicism in the father or by a half chromatid mutation in maternal gametes.
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PMID:X-linked mental retardation: transmission of the trait by an apparently unaffected male. 26 39

We report six males with the syndrome of macroorchidism and mental retardation. The trait is inherited as though X-linked, or possibly autosomal dominant male-limited. We also found no evidence of gonadal dysfunction. Associated abnormalities were abnormal EEG (3/4), seizures (2/6), and one instance each of cervical vertebral fusion, cataract, esophoria, and abnormal cutaneous pigmentation. One woman with a 50% a priori risk of bearing the mutant gene had mental retardation and seizures. Results of Xg blood-group typing were uninformative for the purpose of linkage analysis.
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PMID:The X-linked syndrome of macroorchidism and mental retardation: further observations. 26 49

Cytogenetic and verbal studies were done on members of four families with non-specific X-linked mental retardation. Cytogenetic analysis was done using media 199 and GTG-banding; one family had a marker X with a fragile site in band Xq27 or 28. Preliminary results indicate variation of culture conditions can effect the frequency of the marker X. A generalized language disability was found which tended to concentrate in the areas of auditory reception, auditory sequential memory, visual closure and grammatic closure. Articulation errors involved the same sounds which are late in normal development and occur most frequently in both the general population and a Down syndrome population.
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PMID:Familial X-linked mental retardation, verbal disability, and marker X chromosomes. 45 4

A family with X-linked mental retardation and a marker X chromosome was ascertained by the presence of macro-orchidism in the three institutionalized probands. Verbal evaluation revealed a generalized language disability with commonly occurring articulation errors. The heterozygous females in this family exhibited some reduction in mental ability; the marker X chromosome was demonstrated in both sexes.
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PMID:X-linked mental retardation with macro-orchidism and marker X chromosomes. 48 8

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

Data are presented suggesting that the form of X-linked mental retardation with macro-orchidism and the form associated with a fragile site at Xq27 or 28 are the same entity.
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PMID:X-linked mental retardation with macro-orchidism and the fragile site at Xq 27 or 28. 57 32

Cytogenetic studies on a mentally retarded boy revealed an X-Y translocation, karyotype 46,X,t(X;Y)(p22;q11). Only 5 other such cases have been reported and these were all females. The unequivocal male phenotype suggested non-random inactivation of the normal maternally derived X chromosome, and that the non-inactivated X-Y translocation chromosome included the locus for male determination. Confirmation of this was provided by unassociated X and Y chromatin in interphase cells, as well as by reverse banding after BrdU incorporation and autoradiography of metaphase chromosomes. There was anomalous Xg blood group inheritance in the proband, indicating possible localisation of the Xg locus to the terminal portion of the X short arm. Linkage of Xg and a form of X-linked mental retardation is suggested. Close linkage of the Xg locus with the loci for alpha-galactosidase, phosphoglycerate kinase, G-6-PD, and MPS II was excluded.
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PMID:X-Y translocation in a retarded phenotypic male. Clinical, cytogenetic, biochemical, and serogenetic studies. 74 19

Five male members in four generations of the same family had hypogonadism, gynecomastia, mental retardation, obesity, and short stature. The X-linked mode of inheritance, the distinctive facies, the normal size of the hands and feet, and the true gynecomastia are the main characteristics. Endocrine evaluation and histologic studies of the testes suggest partial hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. This disorder represents a new syndrome distinct from others previously described.
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PMID:X-linked hypogonadism, gynecomastia, mental retardation, short stature, and obesity--a new syndrome. 75 23

An X-linked pattern of transmission observed in four families with familial mental retardation in several generations was associated with a probable secondary constriction at the distal end of the q arms of the X chromosome. Twenty retarded males and no retarded females were observed. All available live retarded males and most of their normal mothers were found to have the abnormal X chromosome. The marker chromosome was shown to be the X chromosome in each case by Giemsa banding. In affected male and female carriers the marker chromosome varied in appearance and was not present in all metaphases. The significance of this study in relation to previously reported pedigrees showing non-specific X-linked mental retardation is discussed.
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PMID:Familial X-linked mental retardation with an X chromosome abnormality. 83

We describe a boy with the hypertelorism-hypospadias (BBB) syndrome. His mother and his maternal grandmother showed minor manifestations suggestive of the syndrome. The BBB syndrome is a syndrome of multiple congenital anomalies with mental retardation due a segregating mendelian mutation, either X-linked or autosomal. This paper reviews the literature on the subject and emphasizes the problem of identifying females at high risk of transmitting the condition.
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PMID:Studies of malformation syndromes of man VB: the hypertelorism-hypospadias (BBB) syndrome. Case report and review. 87 Mar 22


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