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Symptom
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Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a 2 month-old infant referred for
failure to thrive
. At birth, weight was 3820 g and length 52 cm. After physiologic weight loss, the patient showed no further weight gain for the next two months. On admittance (age 2 mo), weight was 3340 g and length 53 cm; the infant had severe dystrophy, generalized
hypotonia
and dehydration; blood chemistry showed hyponatremia, hyperkalemia and hypochloremia. A salt losing syndrome of adrenal origin was hypothesized. However, rehydration and hydrocortisone administration failed to correct hyponatremia and hyperkalemia. Endocrine assessment showed high levels of aldosterone and plasma renin activity, suggesting pseudohypoaldosteronism. Oral sodium chloride supplementation normalized electrolyte balance and the patient showed progressive weight gain and catch-up growth, confirming the diagnosis.
...
PMID:Pseudohypoaldosteronism: report of a case presenting as failure to thrive. 758
Peroxisomal bifunctional enzyme complex deficiency is a recently recognized abnormality of fatty acid metabolism. We herein present the association of a flecked retina with peroxisomal bifunctional enzyme deficiency, a clinical association not previously reported. We suggest the finding of a flecked retina in an infant presenting with
hypotonia
, seizures, and
failure to thrive
is highly suggestive of this diagnosis.
...
PMID:Peroxisomal bifunctional enzyme complex deficiency with associated retinal findings. 762 69
Two siblings are reported who have features of the Marden-Walker syndrome. They have congenital joint contractures, camptodactyly, talipes equinovarus, abnormal facies, global delay in developmental milestones,
hypotonia
and
failure to thrive
. About 20 cases have been reported in the world literature. A summary of some of the cases is presented. This syndrome appears to be an autosomal recessive trait in some families.
...
PMID:Marden-Walker syndrome in two siblings. 769 May 81
The cri-du-chat syndrome is a contiguous gene syndrome that results from a deletion of the short arm of chromosome 5 (5p). Patients present with a cat-like cry at birth, which is usually considered diagnostic of this syndrome. Additional features of the syndrome include
failure to thrive
, microcephaly, hypertelorism, epicanthal folds,
hypotonia
, and severe mental retardation. We report on four families in which patients with 5p deletions have only the characteristic cat-like cry, with normal to mildly delayed development. The precise locations of the deletions in each family were determined by FISH using lambda phage and cosmid clones. All of the deletion breakpoints map distal to a chromosomal region that is implicated with the facial features and severe mental and developmental delay in the cri-du-chat syndrome. DNA clones mapping in the chromosomal region associated with the cat-like cry feature will be useful diagnostic tools. They will allow for the distinction between 5p deletions that will result in the severe delay observed in most cri-du-chat syndrome patients and those deletions that result in the isolated cat-like cry feature, which is associated with a better prognosis.
...
PMID:Evidence for a distinct region causing a cat-like cry in patients with 5p deletions. 776 63
The oculocerebrorenal (Lowe) syndrome is an X-linked recessive disorder characterized by congenital cataracts,
hypotonia
, developmental delay, poor growth and renal tubular dysfunction. Although the disorder has been mapped to chromosome Xq24-26, the underlying metabolic defect remains unknown. The renal component of the Lowe syndrome comprises tubular dysfunction, that is tubular proteinuria and generalized aminoaciduria progressing to the renal Fanconi syndrome, with later glomerular disease. Clinical problems typically include polyuria, acidosis, hypophosphatemia with rickets and eventually end stage renal disease. Hypercalciuria and its sequelae (nephrocalcinosis and nephrolithiasis) have not been described as cardinal features of the untreated disorder although they reportedly complicate vitamin D and calcium therapy of rickets. We discuss 5 boys with congenital cataracts,
hypotonia
, developmental delay,
failure to thrive
and the renal Fanconi syndrome who were diagnosed with the Lowe syndrome and in whom hypercalciuria was documented at diagnosis. We conclude that hypercalciuria and its sequelae may occur commonly in patients with the Lowe syndrome as a component of tubular dysfunction or a complication of therapy.
...
PMID:Hypercalciuria and nephrocalcinosis in the oculocerebrorenal syndrome. 786 19
We report a classical case of Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) in an adult with typical interstitial deletion of chromosome 15, and emphasize the study of hormonal change. This 21-year-old female had PWS face characteristics, small hands and feet, marked obesity, mental retardation, growth retardation, absence of puberty and amenorrhea. She also had the characteristic history of infantile
hypotonia
, poor feeding,
failure to thrive
and then improved appetite, followed by obesity from the age of four years. She had compulsive hyperphagia, to the extent of stealing and lying to take food. Chromosome study with high resolution banding technique revealed a small interstitial deletion at band q12 of chromosome 15, which is characteristically found in a majority of patients with PWS. Hormonal study revealed hypogonadism and growth hormone deficiency of supposed hypothalamic origin. She also had non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus with decreased pancreatic insulin reserve.
...
PMID:Hormonal change in an adult with Prader-Willi syndrome: report of a case. 791 75
Two new familial cases of 2-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (2-KGD) deficiency are reported: a girl who died at 10 years and a boy, still alive at 4 years, born to consanguineous parents. The cases developed progressively severe encephalopathy with axial
hypotonia
, psychotic behaviour, pyramidal symptoms and
failure to thrive
. Both children exhibited permanent lactic acidosis with acute episodes during emotional stress and various infections, associated with elevated lactate/pyruvate (L/P) ratio and slightly decreased ketone body ratio in plasma. In fibroblasts, the L/P ratio was greatly increased in the boy. No respiratory chain complex deficiency could be demonstrated in cultured fibroblasts or in mitochondria isolated from a muscle biopsy performed on the boy. In muscle isolated mitochondria, a progressive decrease of the rate of glutamate oxidation was observed after ADP addition; the rate of 2-ketoglutarate oxidation was low in the absence of ADP and did not increase after ADP addition. 2-KGD deficiency was demonstrated in fibroblasts from both children and in the boy's muscle and myoblasts. The 2-KGD complex is composed of three separate enzymes: E1, E2 and E3. We could demonstrate in our patient that the E1 and E3 subunits were normal, suggesting that the E2 component could be responsible for the defect.
...
PMID:2-Ketoglutarate dehydrogenase deficiency, a rare cause of primary hyperlactataemia: report of a new case. 829 96
We diagnosed the carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome in five children who were seen during their first year of life with
failure to thrive
, feeding difficulties, psychomotor retardation,
hypotonia
, esotropia, inverted nipples, lipodystrophy, pericardial effusion, and hepatic dysfunction. Steatosis was observed in liver biopsy specimens, and cerebellar hypoplasia was present on computed tomography. The disorder is characterized by a complex carbohydrate deficiency in certain glycoproteins, notably transferrin, which can be used as a marker of the disease. The carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome may be an important and easily identifiable cause of
failure to thrive
and neurologic dysfunction in infancy. The presence of the disorder in siblings of different gender and the finding of biochemical abnormalities in some unaffected parents suggest an autosomal recessive inheritance.
...
PMID:Early manifestations of the carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome. 841 16
Lysinuric protein intolerance (LPI) is an autosomal recessive disease caused by defective transport of the cationic amino acids lysine, arginine, and ornithine at the cell membrane. About 80 patients with LPI have been described worldwide, almost half of them in Finland. The symptoms appear in early childhood as a
failure to thrive
, growth retardation, muscular
hypotonia
, and episodes of stupor after protein-rich meals. Twenty-nine Finnish patients (current median age 24.8 years, range 3.7-47.9 years) over a mean follow-up time of 18.1 years (range 1.2-27.2 years) had 57 fractures after minor trauma, mostly in childhood. Their 440 skeletal radiographs showed severe osteoporosis (13/29), controversially abnormal thickening of cortex of the metacarpals (7/29), or thin cortices of the long bones (5/29), endplate impression of vertebrae (8/29), rickets-like metaphyses (2/29), or early destruction of cartilage (3/29). Skeletal maturation was delayed by 1-5 years in 23 of 24 patients. There was no correlation between fracture incidence, radiological bone structure, and delayed skeletal maturation.
...
PMID:Skeletal manifestations of lysinuric protein intolerance. A follow-up study of 29 patients. 843 Mar 40
We report on an aneuploidy syndrome due to the unbalanced segregation of a familial translocation (4;21)(p16.3;q22.1) causing a partial 4p monosomy and a partial 21q trisomy. The three affected children presented with severe
failure to thrive
, short stature, microcephaly, profound
hypotonia
, and mental retardation. The face, very similar in the three children, is characterized by frontal bossing, upslanting of the palpebral fissures, short nose, and deep set ears, giving the overall appearance of the Down syndrome. The molecular study has defined the aneuploid segment on both 4p and 21q. Most of the Down syndrome critical region was found to the trisomic, while only part of the candidate Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome critical region was deleted, suggesting that this region is not critical for the major malformations characteristic for WHS.
...
PMID:Molecular and cytogenetic characterization of a recurrent unbalanced translocation (4;21)(p16.3;q22.1): relevance to the Wolf-Hirschhorn and Down syndrome critical regions. 872 87
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