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)

Malformations of the cerebral cortex are an important cause of developmental disabilities and epilepsy. Here we review those malformations for which a genetic basis has been elucidated or is suspected and the types of associated epilepsy. Schizencephaly (cleft brain) has a wide anatomo-clinical spectrum, including partial epilepsy in most patients. Familial occurrence is rare. Heterozygous mutations in the EMX2 gene were reported in 13 patients. X-linked bilateral periventricular nodular heterotopia (BPNH) consists of typical BPNH with epilepsy in females and prenatal lethality in males. About 88% of patients have partial epilepsy. Filamin A mutations, all leading to a truncated protein, have been reported in three families and in sporadic patients. The most frequent forms of lissencephaly (agyria-pachygyria) are caused by mutations of LIS1. XLIS mutations cause classical lissencephaly in hemizygous males and subcortical band heterotopia (SBH) in heterozygous females. The thickness of the heterotopic band and the degree of pachygyria correlate with the likelihood of developing Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. Mutations of the coding region of XLIS were found in all reported pedigrees and in 38-91% of sporadic female patients with SBH. With few exceptions, children with LIS1 mutations have isolated lissencephaly, with severe developmental delay and infantile spasms. Autosomal recessive lissencephaly with cerebellar hypoplasia, accompanied by severe developmental delay, seizures, and hypotonia has been associated with mutations of the reelin gene. Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy is due to mutations of the fukutin gene and is accompanied by polymicrogyria. Febrile seizures and epilepsy with generalized tonic-convulsions appear in about 50% of children but are usually not severe. Tuberous sclerosis (TS) is caused by mutations in at least two genes, TSC1 and TSC2; 75% of cases are sporadic; 60% of patients have epilepsy, manifested in 50% of them as infantile spasms. TSC1 mutations seem to cause a milder disease with fewer cortical tubers and lower frequency of seizures. Among several syndromes featuring polymicrogyria, bilateral perisylvian polymicrogyria had familial occurrence on several occasions. Genetic heterogeneity is likely, including autosomal recessive, X-linked dominant, X-linked recessive inheritance, and association with 22q11.2 deletions. About 65% of patients have severe epilepsy, often Lennox-Gastaut syndrome.
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PMID:Epilepsy and genetic malformations of the cerebral cortex. 1157 36

Vitamin D-dependent rickets type I (VDDRI) represents an autosomal recessive hereditary defect in vitamin D metabolism. Patients with VDDRI have mutations of chromosome 12 that affect the gene for the enzyme 1-alpha-hydroxylase, resulting in decreased levels of 1,25(OH)(2) vitamin D. Clinical features include growth failure, hypotonia, weakness, rachitic rosary, convulsions, tetany, open fontanels, and pathologic fractures. The oral and dental manifestations of VDDRI have not been described. Here we present the case of a 10-year-old girl affected by VDDRI, as established by the combination of clinical and radiographic findings, family history, and laboratory values. Dental examination revealed markedly hypoplastic, yellowish-to-brownish enamel in all permanent teeth, malocclusion, and chronic periodontal disease. Large quadrangular pulp chambers and short roots were evident in dental radiographs. Light microscopic and ultrastructural examination showed abnormalities of dental hard tissues, affecting both enamel and dentin. The differential diagnosis and treatment of VDDRI are discussed.
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PMID:Oral and dental manifestations of vitamin D-dependent rickets type I: report of a pediatric case. 1278 52

The neuropsychiatric manifestations of postmalaria neurological syndrome (PMNS) that have been described are highly variable and include an acute confusional state or acute psychosis with >or=1 of the following symptoms: clouding of consciousness, inappropriate speech or behavior, visual hallucination, catatonia with waxy flexibility, generalized convulsion, fine postural tremor, and decreased muscle tone. This postinfectious syndrome occurs after the clearance of parasitemia and is not a manifestation of cerebral malaria. We present the first identified case of and magnetic resonance imaging findings for a patient with PMNS in the United States.
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PMID:Postmalaria neurological syndrome after treatment of Plasmodium falciparum malaria in the United States. 1285 30

PEHO syndrome is a rare progressive infantile encephalopathy with onset within the first few months of life. Few patients fulfilling the diagnostic criteria for PEHO syndrome have been reported outside Finland. Affected infants have facial dysmorphism and suffer from severe hypotonia, profound mental retardation, convulsions (often with a hypsarrhythmic EEG pattern), transient or persistent peripheral oedema, and optic atrophy. Cerebellar and brainstem atrophy are usually present on neuroimaging. A PEHO-like syndrome has been described, in which the affected individuals have neither optic atrophy nor the typical neuroradiological findings. We report five Australian patients, the first with classical features of PEHO syndrome, and four who have a PEHO-like disorder. We compare their features with other published cases. We suggest that PEHO or a PEHO-like syndrome may affect more patients than are currently identified, based on the original diagnostic criteria for this disorder.
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PMID:PEHO and PEHO-like syndromes: report of five Australian cases. 1294 65

Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a sporadic disorder of chromosome abnormalities with an estimated prevalence of 1 in 15,000. It mainly affects the central nervous system, and often involves the hypothalamus. Both general and regional anesthesia for these patients is difficult mainly due to morbid obesity. Other common problems include hypotonia, disturbance in thermoregulation, arrhythmia, cor pulmonale, diabetes mellitus, behavior problems, and convulsions. We report on 2 pediatric patients with PWS receiving general anesthesia. The first patient experienced life-threatening episodes of severe hypoxemia in the postanesthesia care unit (PACU) as well as in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). Nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) was suggested by the pediatric pulmonary medicine specialist, and thereafter the patient's condition improved. The clinical course of the second patient was uneventful except for transient intermittent episodes of bronchospasms during emergence. In addition, we discuss differences between these 2 cases and our strategy for the prevention of perioperative complications for PWS patients in the future.
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PMID:Anesthesia for pediatric patients with Prader-Willi syndrome: report of two cases. 1295 94

The case of a French child, born of consanguineous parents of Tunisian origin, is described. He showed a severe multisystem disease with dyserythropoietic, sideroblastic anaemia, delayed neurological development with hypotonia and convulsions, salt-losing nephropathy, chronic watery diarrhoea, lactic acidosis with mitochondrial dysfunction, brittle hair, hypergammaglobulinaemia, fatty liver with intermittent transaminasaemia, and terminal pulmonary fibrosis. Two siblings, of both sexes, were stillborn; two more lived only a short time. One sister is alive and well. SDS gel analysis of the red cell membranes showed a deficiency within 'Band 7' at 32 kDa. Analysis of the gene encoding 'stomatin', or 'erythrocyte membrane protein 7.2b', the principal protein of 'Band 7', revealed a complex series of aberrant spliceforms centred around exon 3, for which no explanatory genomic lesion could be found. The true underlying molecular cause of this condition remains obscure, but it suggests that the stomatin gene should be studied in other cases.
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PMID:A family showing recessively inherited multisystem pathology with aberrant splicing of the erythrocyte Band 7.2b ('stomatin') gene. 1497 Jul 44

The clinical, neuroradiological, neuropathological and biochemical findings in a patient with optico-cochleo-dentate degeneration (OCDD; OMIM 258700) are presented in a severe case succumbing at the age of 4 years. The electron microscopic and biochemical data showed for the first time that OCDD may occur as the phenotypic expression of D-bifunctional protein deficiency, i.e., a peroxisomal disorder. The boy was born as the first child of healthy, consanguineous parents of Turkish origin. No other family members were affected. The main clinical symptoms consisted of muscle hypotonia ("floppy infant"), generalized epileptic fits, hypacusis, rotatory nystagmus, insufficient pupillary reactions, and mental retardation. Fibroblast cultures revealed D-bifunctional protein deficiency. Neuropathological examination displayed moderate frontoparietal and insular microgyria, and atrophy of the cerebellum. Loss of neurons was severe in the granular layer, the Purkinje cell band of the cerebellum, and rather complete in the dentate nucleus. A corresponding loss of myelinated fibers associated with characteristic periodic acid-Schiff-positive macrophages was most prominent in the white matter of the cerebellum. There was additional severe loss of myelinated fibers in the central portions of the optic nerve, reduction of the nerve fiber density in the cochlear nerve, and reduction of myelinated nerve fibers by about 80-90% in the sural nerve, which has not been studied in previous cases. At the electron microscopic level, characteristic inclusions mainly in perivascular macrophages and astrocytes were the most prominent finding. The inclusions usually showed a bilaminar structure, whereas trilaminar structures, typically seen in adrenoleukodystrophy, and multilaminar structures were less frequently seen.
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PMID:Optico-cochleo-dentate degeneration associated with severe peripheral neuropathy and caused by peroxisomal D-bifunctional protein deficiency. 1523 8

Non-ketotic hyperglycinaemia is an autosomal recessive disorder of glycine metabolism caused by a defect in the glycine cleavage system. Affected neonates present with lethargy, feeding difficulty, hypotonia, apnoea, poorly controlled convulsions and coma. Four cases are reported, three of whom died in the neonatal period. The fourth case was treated with dextromethorphan and sodium benzoate. He survived with neurodevelopmental delay but is now almost seizure-free.
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PMID:Four cases of neonatal non-ketotic hyperglycinaemia. 1572 Aug 92

A 12-month-old boy diagnosed with propionic acidemia underwent gastrostomy. The patient's general state was good and he was alert, but with reduced muscular tone (unstable when seated with support, floppy head) and with dystonic movements in all extremities. An electroencephalogram showed slightly slowed brain activity. The patient was being treated with a low protein diet, phenobarbital, L-carnitine, L-isoleucine, and biotin. Surgery was carried out in satisfactory conditions with general anesthesia without opioids combined with infiltration of the surgical wound with local anesthetic. Recovery from anesthesia was rapid and free of complications. Propionic acidemia is caused by mitochondrial propionyl coenzyme carboxylase deficiency. Most patients have episodes of severe metabolic ketoacidosis as a result of excessive protein intake, delayed development, vomiting, gastroesophageal reflux, lethargy, hypotonia, and convulsions. The anesthetic approach involves avoiding triggers of metabolic acidosis (such as fasting, dehydration, hypoxemia, and hypotension) and preventing airway complications. Agents that metabolize propionic acid (such as succinylcholine, benzylisoquinoline neuromuscular blocking agents, and propofol) are not used, as they can exacerbate acidemia. We also believe that using local or regional anesthesia in combination with general anesthesia without opiates is safe and effective for controlling pain during surgery and postoperative recovery, as that combination avoids respiratory depression in these patients, who are highly sensitive to opiates.
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PMID:[Infant boy with propionic acidemia: anesthetic implications]. 1620 Sep 24

Cinnarizine, a piperazine derivative, is a widely prescribed medication for the treatment of vestibular disorders and motion sickness. Cinnarizine has antihistaminic, antiserotoninergic, antidopaminergic, and calcium channel-blocking properties. We present the first report in the English literature of cinnarizine poisoning and toxicokinetics. A 30-month-old toddler ingested 225 mg of cinnarizine, 18 times the recommended dose for older children. Four hours later, she became jittery with a wide-based gait and vomited 3 times. She was examined by her family physician, who reported stupor and twitching in both hands. On admission to the hospital, 6 hours after the ingestion, she was stuporous and had 3 short, generalized tonic-clonic convulsions that were controlled with a single dose of midazolam. Full clinical recovery was seen 10 hours after ingestion. Serum cinnarizine levels were 7407, 2629, and 711 ng/mL on admission and at 4 and 12 hours thereafter, respectively, 26.9 times higher than the therapeutic levels in adults. Elimination rate constant, calculated by linear regression of the ln concentrations of the 3 data points, was 0.19. Half-life, calculated from the equation t(1/2) = 0.693/kel, where kel is the elimination rate constant, was 3.65 hours. The manufacturing company revealed that their database contains 23 reports of cinnarizine overdose (adult and children), received between 1972 and 2004. Clinically, these cases reflect mainly symptoms of alterations in consciousness ranging from somnolence to stupor and coma, vomiting, extrapyramidal symptoms, and hypotonia. In a small number of young children, convulsions developed; recovery was uneventful in 4 cases and not reported in 1. The neurologic complication may be explained by the antihistaminic effect of cinnarizine because central nervous system depression and convulsions are known complications of antihistaminic overdose. It is hypothesized that cinnarizine-induced convulsions also are related to the antidopaminergic effect of the drug. Apart from the convulsions, no other adverse effects related to calcium channel-blocking properties, such as bradycardia or hemodynamic instability, were observed. Pediatric patients with cinnarizine overdose need to be observed in a health care facility for potential neurologic complications and be treated symptomatically. The delay to onset of clinical effect should be considered in the observation period.
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PMID:Pediatric cinnarizine overdose and toxicokinetics. 1663 15


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