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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
Troyer syndrome
was found by Cross & McKusick (1967) in 20 members of 12 Old Order Amish families in Holmes County, Ohio; it is a form of hereditary spastic paraplegia combined with distal muscle wasting, i.e. signs of involvement of lower motor neurons. The condition usually begins at 1 to 2 years and progresses at variable rates. Further manifestations include growth retardation, delayed speech development with dysarthria and drooling, and cerebellar signs; mental functions are usually not affected but severe emotional lability is a common finding. Brothers in a Wisconsin Old Order Amish family are reported with spastic diplegia,
mental retardation
, behavioral disorder and shortness of stature; the condition apparently is not progressive, and may be a "new" syndrome but could also represent a variant of the
Troyer syndrome
. Autosomal recessive inheritance is most likely, although consanguinity of the parents could not be proven. Another child in this family suffers from focal scleroderma (morphea) which is not related to the neurological syndrome.
...
PMID:Familial spastic paraplegia with distal muscle wasting in the Old Order Amish; atypical Troyer syndrome or "new" syndrome. 126 Oct 70
Hereditary spastic paraplegia is a group of clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorders consisting of pure and complicated forms. A variant with the additional features of severe atrophy of the small hand muscles, dysarthria,
mental retardation
, and short stature has been termed
Troyer syndrome
(MIM#275900) after the name of Old Order Amish families suffering from these symptoms. We report here an Austrian family with two individuals who exhibit all the features of
Troyer syndrome
, and provide additional data on this disorder. Electrophysiological studies showed chronic denervation and reduced motor nerve conduction velocities but normal sensory potentials. Muscle biopsy revealed a neurogenic pattern while the sural nerve was normal on histological examination. Brain abnormalities on magnetic resonance imaging consisted of a thin corpus callosum with a poorly developed cingulate gyrus and mild periventricular signal hyperintensities. These findings characterize the
Troyer syndrome
as a disorder of the first and second motor neuron with additional damage in the brain. The morphological features observed in this family may contribute to the grouping and subsequent understanding of complicated forms of hereditary spastic paraplegia, together with similar observations in other, more recently reported families.
...
PMID:Troyer syndrome: a combination of central brain abnormality and motor neuron disease? 1046 56