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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An 18-year-old girl with von Gierke's disease associated with a lipid storage myopathy is reported. The diagnosis of von Gierke's disease was made from decreased activity in glucose-6-phosphatase in the jejunal biopsy specimen. Neurologically she showed generalized
hypotonia
of the muscles, atrophy of bilateral proximal muscles of the lower extremities, weakness in neck flexors, deltoid and lumbar girdle muscles, and a positive Gower's sign. Muscle biopsy from flexor femoris muscle revealed fatty deposition in type 1 fibers and atrophy of type 2 fibers and the diagnosis of an accompanying lipid storage myopathy was made. This case also had a
ventricular septal defect
confirmed by right cardiac catheterization.
...
PMID:Lipid storage myopathy in von Gierke's disease: a case report. 21 38
A serological survey over a 1-year period of 1416 mothers at delivery and their 1434 offspring for the presence of anti-Borrelia burgdorferi antibodies revealed a prevalence of 0.85%. Clinically active Lyme disease during pregnancy was found in 1 of these 12 women with elevated titres and the child was born with a
ventricular septal defect
. Of six affected children, two had hyperbilirubinaemia, one muscular
hypotonia
, one was underweight for gestational age, one was macrocephalic, and one had supraventricular extrasystoles. Anomalous findings could not be attributed to B. burgdorferi due to a lack of serological evidence of intrauterine infection. Our data do not imply the need for serological screening in pregnancy, however, the importance of recognition and treatment of Lyme disease in pregnancy is emphasized.
...
PMID:Infants born to mothers with antibodies against Borrelia burgdorferi at delivery. 292 Jul 47
We report a sibship of two brothers and one sister with the osteoporosis-pseudoglioma syndrome and congenital heart disease. They presented in infancy with visual impairment and psychomotor retardation. Major features included bilateral cataracts, generalised osteopenia, severe platyspondyly, borderline mental retardation, muscular
hypotonia
, joint laxity, and
ventricular septal defect
. Parental consanguinity and affected sibs of both sexes strongly suggested autosomal recessive inheritance. Analysis of the present and previously reported cases showed a wide range of interfamilial variability which may point to the existence of multiple allelism or genetic heterogeneity in this syndrome.
...
PMID:Osteoporosis-pseudoglioma syndrome with congenital heart disease: a new association. 335 89
We report 17 cases of the campomelic syndrome (CS) and a follow-up of one of the original patients of Maroteaux et al who is now 17 years old. Our review is based on 97 patients, including our own. An infant with the CS presents at birth with spectacularly short and bowed femora and tibiae. The initial chest radiograph confirms the diagnosis by demonstrating extremely small bladeless scapulae and hypoplastic pedicles of many thoracic vertebrae. Ossification of the sternal segments, pubis, talus, and knee epiphyses is also retarded. Usually the hips are dislocated and talipes equinovarus deformities are present. There is a small chondrocranium and a disproportionately large neurocranium. The bell-shaped chest, narrow superiorly, does not explain the degree of respiratory distress that soon ensues. Narrow airways from defective tracheo-bronchial cartilage can often be demonstrated on the radiograph, but micrognathia, retroglossia, cleft palate, hypoplastic lungs, and even CNS-based
hypotonia
contribute to the respiratory problem. Internal anomalies include frequent absence of olfactory bulbs and tracts and dilatation of cerebral ventricles, heart defects (PDA,
VSD
, stenosis of aortic isthmus), hydroureter and hydronephrosis, renal hypoplasia, renal hypoplasia, and rarely renal cysts.
...
PMID:The campomelic syndrome: review, report of 17 cases, and follow-up on the currently 17-year-old boy first reported by Maroteaux et al in 1971. 634 34
A 5-month-old female with the Coffin-Siris syndrome is described. Characteristic features included prenatal and postnatal growth retardation, slight mental retardation, feeding and respiratory problems, microcephaly,
hypotonia
, full lips, congenital heart disease, hypoplasia of the distal phalanges of the fifth fingers and toes. She underwent successful primary closure of a
ventricular septal defect
at 8.5 months of age, weighing 5.0 kg. After the operation, the feeding and respiratory problems disappeared, and growth and development were well maintained.
...
PMID:The Coffin-Siris syndrome: a case report. 719
Toriello-Carey syndrome is characterized by agenesis of the corpus callosum, telecanthus, short palpebral fissures, Robin sequence, abnormal ears, cardiac anomalies, and
hypotonia
. We describe two patients with Toriello-Carey syndrome and call attention to an unbalanced sex ratio. The first patient, a male, was born at term by Cesarean section and manifests micrognathia, cleft soft palate, hypoplastic right ear, anotia on the left side, cerebellar vermis hypoplasia, hydrocephalus, agenesis of the corpus callosum, and hypoplastic left heart. He died 2 days after birth. The second patient is the male sib of a patient reported previously [Am J Med Genet 42: 374-376; 1992]. He had large fontanelles, telecanthus, a short nose, small and malformed ears, micrognathia, a large
ventricular septal defect
, and pulmonary stenosis. At age 8 months he has growth retardation and developmental delay. A sister is unaffected. Review documented eight other patients with Toriello-Carey syndrome, six of whom were male. The two female patients are less severely affected and are still alive. Of the other male patients, all are deceased except one who is still alive at age 5 years; he has severe growth retardation (-3 SD), mental retardation (DQ44), severe speech delay, and characteristic anomalies. The predominance of affected males and the milder phenotype in the female patients suggests an X-linked gene or sex influenced gene.
...
PMID:Toriello-Carey syndrome: evidence for X-linked inheritance. 1056 85
Tracheal agenesis (TA) is a rare congenital anomaly that is incompatible with prolonged life. It may occur alone or with other associated anomalies. A term infant presented with cyanosis,
hypotonia
, absence of crying and respiratory distress at birth. Intubation was difficult. Esophageal intubation was performed under laryngoscopy. As TA was suspected, a bronchoscopy was performed and the infant was found to have a normal epiglottis and vocal cords; however, there was no trachea. Cardiorespiratory deterioration developed and the patient died on the night of the second day at the postnatal age of 41 hours. Tracheal agenesis was confirmed at autopsy. Associated anomalies included bronchoesophageal fistula, double outlet of the right ventricle with
ventricular septal defect
, bicuspid pulmonary valve, single lobe of the right lung, imperforate anus and a rectourethral fistula. According to development theory, tracheal agenesis and VACTERL (vertebral defects, anal atresia, cardiovascular defects, tracheoesophageal fistula, radial dysplasia or renal defects and limb defects association may result from a mesodermal deficiency caused by abnormal blastogenesis.
...
PMID:Tracheal agenesis with multiple congenital anomalies: a case report. 950 93
Mental retardation and
hypotonia
are found in virtually all Down syndrome (DS) individuals, whereas congenital heart defects (CHDs) are only present in a subset of cases. Although there have been numerous reports of the frequency of CHDs in DS, few of the studies have had complete ascertainment of DS in a defined geographic area. The Atlanta Down Syndrome Project, a population-based study of infants born with trisomy 21, provides such a resource. In the first 6.5 years of the study, 243 trisomy 21 livebirths were identified in the five-county Atlanta area (birth prevalence: 9.6/10,000). Cardiac diagnoses were available on 227 (93%) of the cases and 89% of these evaluations were made by echocardiography, cardiac catheterization, surgery, or autopsy. Of the 227 DS infants, 44% had CHDs including 45% atrioventricular septal defect (with or without other CHDs), 35%
ventricular septal defect
(with or without other CHDs), 8% isolated secundum atrial septal defect, 7%, isolated persistent patent ductus arteriosus, 4% isolated tetralogy of Fallot, and 1% other. This report is unique in that it contains the largest number of trisomy 21 infants ascertained in a population-based study where modern techniques for diagnosing cardiac abnormalities predominate.
...
PMID:Population-based study of congenital heart defects in Down syndrome. 1053 36
We describe the phenotypes of two male sibs with partial monosomy of chromosome 5 [46,XY,der(5)inv ins(1;5)(p32;q35.4q34)]; maternally derived from a balanced insertion of 1 and 5 [inv ins (1;5)(p.32;q35.4q34)]. One sib had microcephaly, cleft lip and palate, facial anomalies, atrial (ASD) and ventricular (
VSD
) septal defects, camptodactyly 4th and 5th fingers, and developmental delay. The other sib showed microcephaly, facial anomalies, ASD,
hypotonia
, primary optic nerve hypoplasia, and developmental delay. Only seven other patients with 5q deletions distal to 5q33 have been reported and none showed the putative breakpoints identified in our two patients. All nine showed developmental delay or malformations of the CNS and facial anomalies; six of nine had defects of cardiac septation. Our two patients and one other were shown to have only one copy of the cardiac specific hCSX gene that defines in part the etiology of their ASD and
VSD
. The other components of their phenotypes cannot be related at present to genes identified in the deleted segments.
...
PMID:Distal 5q deletion syndrome: phenotypic correlations. 1156 36
Infants with Down syndrome are known to have a high frequency of birth defects, particularly cardiac and gastrointestinal defects. Mental retardation of different degrees is common, but accompanying central nervous system malformations are rare. We report a boy born spontaneously in the 37th postconceptional week with multiple malformations: microcephaly, hypertelorism, blepharophimosis, medial cleft palate, micrognathia, omphalocele, and pathologic palmar and plantar creases. Cardial sonography revealed a
ventricular septal defect
and mild pulmonary stenosis. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a general but infratentorial stressed brain atrophy with widening of the inner and outer cerebrospinal fluid spaces and dysplasia of the corpus callosum. Chromosomal analysis showed a free trisomy 21. The boy had muscular
hypotonia
and developed severe motor and mental retardation, accompanied by microsomia and generalized epileptic seizures. At age 8 months, he died of sudden nocturnal respiratory and cardiac failure. The peculiarity of this case is the combination of Down syndrome with midline developmental defects (callosal dysplasia, medial cleft palate, omphalocele) accompanied by severe malformative encephalopathy. There are no previous reports of this combination, but there are genetic links between Down syndrome and midline defects concerning the Drosophila single-minded (sim) gene. The expression pattern of the human sim corresponding gene suggests that it might be involved in the pathogenesis of midline defects in Down syndrome.
...
PMID:Midline developmental anomalies in Down syndrome. 1217 71
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