Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (hypotonia)
5,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Brotizolam (2-bromo-4-(2-chlorophenyl)-9-methyl-6H-thieno[3,2-f]-1,2,4-triazolo [4,3-a]-1,4-diazepine, We 941, Lendormin) is a thienotriazolo diazepine with predominantly sleep-inducing properties. Additionally, brotizolam, attenuated conflict behavior in rats and inhibited aggressive behavior in mice and cats. Brotizolam prevented audiogenic seizures in mice, seizures provoked by electroshock in rats and inhibited convulsions elicited by electrical stimulation in the limbic system of cats. Furthermore, brotizolam antagonized seizures induced by the convulsant drugs pentetrazol, bicuculline and strychnine in mice. Motocoordination was not impaired within the effective dose range. Muscle relaxant effects appeared at higher doses only. The onset of effect of brotizolam occurred in the different experiments within 15-30 min, thus indicating a fast enteral absorption and penetration of the blood-brain barrier. The duration of action within the therapeutic dose range was between 2-6 h. The effect of brotizolam was compared with other diazepine derivatives. Brotizolam was more active than diazepam, nitrazepam, estazolam, flurazepam and clonazepam and nearly as active as triazolam.
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PMID:Antiemotional and anticonvulsant activity of brotizolam and its effects on motor performance in animals. 287 99

The FG syndrome is an X-linked recessive mental retardation syndrome. Ten patients are reviewed with special emphasis on the natural history of the intellectual development, constipation, and the prognosis for growth and behaviour. Six out of 10 patients are still macrocephalic, and there is no evidence for a specific growth pattern with respect to height. The degree of mental retardation is is usually severe. The behaviour is characteristically friendly, sociable and over-talkative, with periodic aggression. Six patients have seizures. A characteristic progression seems to occur from congenital hypotonia with joint hyperlaxity at birth, to joint contractures with apparent spasticity and unsteady gait later in life. The constipation was a temporary problem in five cases. The cowlick and the fetal pads persist and are important, but not specific, for the diagnosis.
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PMID:A clinical follow-up of British patients with FG syndrome. 805 29

Early clinical symptoms were analyzed from all known 43 children with aspartylglucosaminuria, born during 1974-1989 in Finland. Pre- and perinatal histories appeared normal for all children, except for muscular hypotonia and weak sucking in some babies. Three infants had abduction stiffness in the hips, needing follow-up. Other abnormalities found in infancy were umbilical or inguinal hernias and unusual susceptibility to respiratory and ear infections. This susceptibility diminished clearly in most patients after six years of age. Episodic diarrhea, described earlier, appeared to be a rather infrequent symptom and a less valuable diagnostic clue. New clinical phenomena were talipes planovalgus or clubfoot, needing surgical treatment, and aggressive behavior, needing, occasionally, child psychiatric consultation or treatment. In addition, angiokeratoma of the skin, not an infrequent phenomenon among adult patients, was found in one child. The main indications for further studies were delayed speech, attention deficit and clumsy or delayed motor functions. The disease is easily misdiagnosed and, universally, probably underdiagnosed. Its incidence in Finland was recalculated and appeared to be at least 1 in 18,500 live-born babies in this country.
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PMID:Early clinical symptoms and incidence of aspartylglucosaminuria in Finland. 833 96

An X-linked recessive syndromic form of mental retardation is described in a family in which 10 males in four generations were affected. The main manifestations were severe to profound intellectual disability, muscular hypotonia in childhood, delayed walking, and difficult, aggressive behavior. There was a moderate reduction both in occipitofrontal circumference (OFC) and height and a similar facial appearance, triangular in shape with a high forehead, prominent ears, and a small pointed chin. Linkage analysis located the gene at Xp22 with maximum lod scores of 4.8 at theta = 0.0 for markers mapping between the closest recombination points at DXS7104 and DXS418. The physical length of this region is approximately 6 Mb. Mutations in the GRPR gene and M6b genes were excluded by sequence analysis. Nearby genes in which mutations are known to be associated with mental retardation (RPS6KA3, STK9, and VCXA, B and C), were excluded by position.
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PMID:Syndromic form of X-linked mental retardation with marked hypotonia in early life, severe mental handicap, and difficult adult behavior maps to Xp22. 1259 87

A 14-year-old boy was referred for a genetics evaluation after high-resolution chromosome analysis showed a small amount of extra material in the proximal long arm of chromosome 21. Five years prior, his karyotype analysis was interpreted as normal with a variant chromosome 21. The patient has short palpebral fissures, strabismus, flat antihelices of the ears, long thumbs with bilaterally absent interphalangeal creases, proximal bilateral 3/4 syndactyly, small testes, hypotonia, mental retardation, and speech problems. He has significant depression and behavioral problems including hyperactivity, aggression, and impulsivity. His 8-year-old brother has more severe behavioral disturbances and depression, but less significant mental retardation. A paternal aunt has mental retardation, is unusually docile, and appears similar to our patient. Chromosome analysis and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) whole chromosome paint of chromosome 21 showed that the patient's father carries a "cryptic" balanced translocation, 46,XY, t(14;21)(q11.2;q11.2), as does the patient's paternal grandmother. Uniparental disomy studies using seven informative polymorphic nucleotide repeat markers from 14q and 21q confirmed biparental inheritance of the number 14 and 21 chromosomes for each brother, and indicate that they and the paternal aunt, all of whom inherited the der(14), are monosomic for proximal 21q and trisomic for proximal 14q. These karyotypes arose through an adjacent-2 segregation in the father on two occasions, and from the paternal grandmother on one occasion. This family is an example of recurrent malsegregation with translocations involving the acrocentrics.
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PMID:Recurrent adjacent-2 segregation of a familial t(14;21)(q11.2;q11.2): phenotypic comparison of two brothers and a paternal aunt inheriting the der(14). 1555 40

The Smith-Magenis syndrome is a rare, complex multisystemic disorder featuring, mental retardation and multiple congenital anomalies caused by a heterozygous interstitial deletion of chromosome 17p11.2. The phenotype of Smith-Magenis syndrome is characterized by a distinct pattern of features including infantile hypotonia, generalized complacency and lethargy in infancy, minor skeletal (brachycephaly, brachydactyly) and craniofacial features, ocular abnormalities, middle ear and laryngeal abnormalities including hoarse voice, as well as marked early expressive speech and language delays, psychomotor and growth retardation, and a 24-hour sleep disturbance. A striking neurobehavioral pattern of stereotypies, hyperactivity, polyembolokoilamania, onychotillomania, maladaptive and self-injurious and aggressive behavior is observed with increasing age. The diagnosis of Smith-Magenis syndrome is based upon the clinical recognition of a constellation of physical, developmental, and behavioral features in combination with a sleep disorder characterized by inverted circadian rhythm of melatonin secretion. Many of the features of Smith-Magenis syndrome are subtle in infancy and early childhood, and become more recognizable with advancing age. Infants are described as looking "cherubic" with a Down syndrome-like appearance, whereas with age the facial appearance is that of relative prognathism. Early diagnosis requires awareness of the often subtle clinical and neurobehavioral phenotype of the infant period. Speech delay with or without hearing loss is common. Most children are diagnosed in mid-childhood when the features of the disorder are most recognizable and striking. While improvements in cytogenetic analysis help to bring cases to clinical recognition at an earlier age, this review seeks to increase clinical awareness about Smith-Magenis syndrome by presenting the salient features observed at different ages including descriptions of the neurologic and behavioral features. Detailed review of the circadian rhythm disturbance unique to Smith-Magenis syndrome is presented. Suggestions for management of the behavioral and sleep difficulties are discussed in the context of the authors' personal experience in the setting of an ongoing Smith-Magenis syndrome natural history study.
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PMID:Neurologic and developmental features of the Smith-Magenis syndrome (del 17p11.2). 1664 92

A central aspect of the cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome is the dysregulation of affect that occurs when lesions involve the 'limbic cerebellum' (vermis and fastigial nucleus). In this case series we describe neuropsychiatric disturbances in adults and children with congenital lesions including cerebellar agenesis, dysplasia, and hypoplasia, and acquired conditions including cerebellar stroke, tumor, cerebellitis, trauma, and neurodegenerative disorders. The behaviors that we witnessed and that were described by patients and families included distractibility and hyperactivity, impulsiveness, disinhibition, anxiety, ritualistic and stereotypical behaviors, illogical thought and lack of empathy, as well as aggression and irritability. Ruminative and obsessive behaviors, dysphoria and depression, tactile defensiveness and sensory overload, apathy, childlike behavior, and inability to appreciate social boundaries and assign ulterior motives were also evident. We grouped these disparate neurobehavioral profiles into five major domains, characterized broadly as disorders of attentional control, emotional control, and social skill set as well as autism spectrum disorders, and psychosis spectrum disorders. Drawing on our dysmetria of thought hypothesis, we conceptualized the symptom complexes within each putative domain as reflecting either exaggeration (overshoot, hypermetria) or diminution (hypotonia, or hypometria) of responses to the internal or external environment. Some patients fluctuated between these two states. We consider the implications of these neurobehavioral observations for the care of patients with ataxia, discuss the broader role of the cerebellum in the pathogenesis of these neuropsychiatric symptoms, and revisit the possibility of using cerebellar stimulation to treat psychiatric disorders by enhancing cerebellar modulation of cognition and emotion.
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PMID:The neuropsychiatry of the cerebellum - insights from the clinic. 1778 22

We report clinical, neuropsychological and molecular findings in affected males and carrier females in the fourth reported family with mental retardation caused by mutation in the PAK3 gene (Xq22.3-q23), W446S. In contrast to previous reports, carrier females manifested learning problems and mild mental disability. Skewed X-inactivation was observed here for the first time in carriers of PAK3 mutation. Neuropsychological tests in affected males and carrier females suggested a common neuropsychological profile of impaired spatial cognitive abilities and defects in attentional and executive functions. The five affected males examined herein had a proportionally small head size or microcephaly, large ears, oral motor hypotonia with drooling and inarticulate speech and short attention span, anxiety, restlessness, and aggression. Brain imaging showed signs of chronic non-progressive hydrocephalus in one patient who manifested psychosis and fluctuant gait deterioration, while two other patients showed no abnormalities. EEG recordings were available from four affected males and one carrier female, and all showed similar posterior slow wave activity without epileptic discharges. Only one affected male in the family suffered from epilepsy. When comparing the affected males in this family and the three previously reported families with mental retardation due to a PAK3 mutation, similarities in their characteristics were small head size or microcephaly, large ears, speech defects, behavioral abnormalities, and psychiatric disease.
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PMID:PAK3 related mental disability: further characterization of the phenotype. 1785 71

Mutations in the AP1S2 gene, encoding the sigma1B subunit of the clathrin-associated adaptor protein complex (AP)-1, have been recently identified in five X-linked mental retardation (XLMR) families, including the original family with Fried syndrome. Studying four patients in two unrelated families in which AP1S2 nonsense and splice-site mutations segregated, we found that affected individuals presented, in addition to previously described features, with elevated protein levels in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Moreover, computed tomography scans demonstrated that the basal ganglia calcifications associated with AP1S2 mutations appeared during childhood and might be progressive. Based on these observations, we propose that AP1S2 mutations are responsible for a clinically recognizable XLMR and autism syndrome associating hypotonia, delayed walking, speech delay, aggressive behavior, brain calcifications, and elevated CSF protein levels. Using the AP-2 complex, in which the sigma subunit is encoded by one single gene, as a model system, we demonstrated that sigma subunits are essential for the stability of human AP complexes. By contrast, no major alteration of the stability, subcellular localization, and function of the AP-1 complex was observed in fibroblasts derived from a patient carrying an AP1S2 mutation. Similarly, neither macro- nor microscopic defects were observed in the brain of an affected fetus. Altogether, these data suggest that the absence of an AP-1 defect in peripheral tissues is due to functional redundancy among AP-1 sigma subunits (sigma1A, sigma1B, and sigma1C) and that the phenotype observed in our patients results from a subtle and brain-specific defect of the AP-1-dependent intracellular protein traffic.
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PMID:Clinical, cellular, and neuropathological consequences of AP1S2 mutations: further delineation of a recognizable X-linked mental retardation syndrome. 1842 3

Opitz and Kaveggia [Opitz and Kaveggia (1974); Z Kinderheilk 117:1-18] reported on a family of five affected males with distinctive facial appearance, mental retardation, macrocephaly, imperforate anus and hypotonia. Risheg et al. [Risheg et al. (2007); Nat Genet 39:451-453] identified an identical mutation (p.R961W) in MED12 in six families with Opitz-Kaveggia syndrome, including a surviving affected man from the family reported in 1974. The previously defined behavior phenotype of hyperactivity, affability, and excessive talkativeness is very frequent in young boys with this mutation, along with socially oriented, attention-seeking behaviors. We present case studies of two older males with FG syndrome and the p.R961W mutation to illustrate how their behavior changes with age. We also characterize the behavior of eight additional individuals with FG syndrome and this recurrent mutation in MED12 using the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales 2nd edition, the Reiss Profile of Fundamental Goals and Motivation Sensitivities, and the Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist. Males with this MED12 mutation had deficits in communication skills compared to their socialization and daily living skills. In addition, they were at increased risk for maladaptive behavior, with a propensity towards aggression, anxiety, and inattention. Based on the behavior phenotype in 10 males with this recurrent MED12 mutation, we offer specific recommendations and interventional strategies. Our findings reinforce the importance of testing for the p.R961W MED12 mutation in males who are suspected of having developmental and behavioral problems with a clinical phenotype that is consistent with FG syndrome.
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PMID:Behavior of 10 patients with FG syndrome (Opitz-Kaveggia syndrome) and the p.R961W mutation in the MED12 gene. 1897 76


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