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

Posterior fossa subdural hematomas in the newborn infant are rare but potentially treatable. The infants are normal after birth, but within days, hydrocephalus hypotonia, and irregular respirations develop. Seizures and third nerve pareses are unusual. We report a neonate in whom this process was identified by computerized tomographic brain scan. We also discuss potential misinterpretations of the computerized tomographic brain scan in neonates.
...
PMID:Posterior fossa subdural hematomas in neonates. 62 28

Fifteen premature infants with lethal congenital cytomegalovirus infection were studied to determine the clinical, neuroradiological, and neuropathological characteristics of the disease in this population. Nine infants were liveborn but died at a postnatal age of 18 +/- 21 days; 6 infants were stillborn. Clinical findings in liveborn infants included microcephaly (77%), seizures (55%), hypotonia (33%), and multiple contractures (18%). Ophthalmological findings included chorioretinitis, optic atrophy, and corneal opacities. Neuroradiological findings included the postnatal evolution of periventricular calcification in 1 infant, and cerebellar hypoplasia diagnosed by magnetic resonance imaging in 1 infant. Neuropathological findings included periventricular necrosis and calcification (12), associated diffuse calcification frequently involving the convexity of the gyri (6), cerebellar hypoplasia (5), periventricular leukomalacia (2), intraventricular hemorrhage (2), hydrocephalus (2), and porencephalic cyst (1). Intranuclear inclusion bodies within the brain were observed in 4 infants, whereas systemic inclusion bodies were present in all infants. These data indicate several atypical findings in preterm infants rarely reported in term infants, including hypotonia, multiple contractures, periventricular leukomalacia, and optic atrophy.
...
PMID:Lethal cytomegalovirus infection in preterm infants: clinical, radiological, and neuropathological findings. 131 11

We describe two female siblings with similar clinical features consisting of hydrocephalus, scaphocephaly, hypotonia, mongoloid eye slant, blepharophimosis, micrognathia, supernumerary mouth frenula and mental retardation. Routine cytogenetic studies in the elder patient did not reveal any abnormality, and initially it was assumed that the syndrome had an autosomal recessive inheritance. However, a slightly larger chromosome 13 was seen in routine G-banded metaphases of the mother and the youngest of the two siblings. A shorter chromosome 15 was detected in the mother only. High resolution banding showed that the abnormal chromosome 13 contained an extra G-positive band at 13q12. The short chromosome 15 in the mother appeared to have a deletion of band q12. Fluorescence in situ hybridization using DNA markers specific to chromosomes 13 and 15 unequivocally showed that the mother was a carrier of a balanced reciprocal translocation t(13;15)(q12;q13), whereas the youngest sibling's karyotype was 46,XX,-13,+der(15)t(13;15)(q12;q13)mat, resulting in partial monosomy 13pter----q12 and partial trisomy 15pter----q13. The proband is thus trisomic for the critical region responsible for Prader-Willi syndrome and Angelman syndrome; this was confirmed by DNA analysis demonstrating one paternal and two maternal alleles from multiallelic marker loci mapping to 15q11-q13. This report illustrates the sensitivity and specificity offered by fluorescence in situ hybridization and its usefulness in the diagnosis and delineation of subtle chromosomal rearrangements.
...
PMID:Reciprocal translocation between the proximal regions of the long arms of chromosomes 13 and 15 resulting in unbalanced offspring: characterization by fluorescence in situ hybridization and DNA analysis. 135 72

A family in which three siblings were affected with severe cerebral malformations in association with ocular anomalies and muscle disease is reported. One sibling was diagnosed as having Fukuyama type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD) because he showed severe hypotonia with dystrophic findings on a muscle biopsy in addition to pachygyria on CT. At the age of 3 years, retinal detachment developed in both eyes. Another sibling exhibited at birth such characteristic features as pachygyria, cephalocele, hydrocephalus, retinal detachment in both eyes, elevated serum creatine kinase activity and arthrogryposis multiplex congenita. We consider these findings to be more consistent with Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS) than with FCMD. Anencephaly found in the third sibling was regarded as WWS with extreme brain abnormality. The appearance of two syndromes (FCMD and WWS) in the three members of the same family suggests that these syndromes could be allelic with variable phenotypes.
...
PMID:Clinical variation within sibships in Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy. 145 90

A pediatric neurologist analyzed the case histories of 30 4-16 year old children diagnosed with cerebellar ataxia in the pediatric neurology unit at the Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Edinburgh, Scotland to examine its clinical features, investigative findings, and etiology. Previous unfavorable events happened to 14 children (46.6%). Yet only 6 (42.8%) of these 14 children had unfavorable events of etiological significance. These previous unfavorable events occurred during the perinatal period (48%). These events in order of significance were asphyxia, prematurity, neonatal jaundice, and trauma. 66.6% of all children had an unsteady gait. The 2nd and 3rd most common signs of cerebellar ataxia were truncal ataxia (53.3%) and hypotonia (36.6%). The next most common symptom was considerable delay in reaching gross motor milestones (50%) such as not sitting until 2 years old. 23 (76.6%) of the children had dysfunctions in 1 of the cerebellar divisions. Clinical examination found dysfunctions most often in the paleocerebellum (86.6) followed by the neocerebellum (70%) and archicerebellum (56.6%). The paleocerebellum and the archicerebellum were the only divisions involved in 6 and 1 of the remaining children, respectively. The most common cause of ataxia was hydrocephalus (23.3%) followed by perinatal problems (20%). 70% of the patients also experienced other central nervous system conditions such as macrocephaly and mental retardation. 5 children had normal investigative findings, 3 of whom had cerebellar ataxia syndrome, 1 had congenital ataxic cerebral palsy, and 1 had familiar ataxia.
...
PMID:Cerebellar ataxia in childhood: a review of clinical features, investigative findings and aetiology in 30 cases. 150 89

A three year old girl with ring chromosome 22 is described. The clinical findings include epicanthus, flat nasal bridge, hypertelorism, long eye-lashes, lymphoedema, hypoplastic toe nails, hydrocephalus and muscular hypotonia. Speech and language development is delayed. At three years the child begins to walk.
...
PMID:Ring chromosome 22: a case report. 172 41

Congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD) associated with cerebro-ocular dysplasia named muscle-eye-brain disease (MEB-D) is described in two sisters. Progressive hypotonia, mental retardation and severe visual failure appeared immediately after birth. Pathological examination demonstrated muscular dystrophy, hydrocephalus, type II lissencephaly and defective eye development of foetal origin. The great similarity of the clinical and neuropathological picture of both sisters is in agreement with an autosomal recessive inheritance. Neuropathological distinction between Fukuyama-CMD and MEB-D is a more severe and earlier cerebral developmental defect and the association with ocular dysplasia in MEB-D.
...
PMID:Neuropathological findings in muscle-eye-brain disease (MEB-D). Neuropathological delineation of MEB-D from congenital muscular dystrophy of the Fukuyama type. 179 64

We report the case of an infant with facial dysmorphism, congenital hydrocephalus, severe hypotonia and absence of psychomotor development, with ocular and cerebral malformations consistent with the diagnosis of Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS). Investigations included a cerebral CT scan indicative of type II lissencephaly and a muscular biopsy which showed findings of muscular dystrophy. The association of hypotonia, developmental delay and seizures with a neuronal migration disturbance and retinal involvement raised the suspicion of a peroxisomal disorder. The pertinent biochemical investigations, however, were negative. The features of this syndrome are reviewed, emphasizing the similarities with other related disorders as cerebro-oculo-muscular syndrome. We suggest that muscle involvement should be investigated in every case of WWS.
...
PMID:[Walker-Warburg syndrome: cerebro-ocular dysgenesis and congenital muscular dystrophy]. 261 34

The migrational disorders are a rare group of congenital malformations of the brain. They consist of the following entities--lissencephaly (agyria-pachygyria), pachygyria, schizencephaly, heterotopia and polymicrogyria. We studied 40 children with migrational disorders radiologically with CT and MR. This article (part I) deals with our patients their characteristic CT and MR findings along with their clinical presentation and course. These patients presented with one or a combination of the following symptoms, hypotonia, seizures, failure to thrive, microcephaly and occasionally hydrocephalus. These two groups of migrational disorders have abnormalities affecting the gyral-sulcal pattern of the cortex and gray-white matter distribution of the brain. MR provided better delineation of these disorders than CT. Because some forms of the migrational disorders can be inherited, it is extremely important for the radiologist to understand the characteristic findings for correct diagnosis which is essential for parental counseling.
...
PMID:The CT and MR evaluation of migrational disorders of the brain. Part I. Lissencephaly and pachygyria. 271 49

From June. 1987 to Dec. 1988, data was collected from 12 cases with Congenital Brain Anomalies. The cases involved 7 girls and 5 boys with ages ranging from 2 days to 15 years old. Abnormalities diagnosed were Cavum-septi pellucidi; Cavum vergae; Cystic dilated cavum; Cavum veli interpositi; Lissencephaly with dysgenesis of the corpus callosum; Dysgenesis of the corpus callosum associated the midline dorsal cyst; Holoprosencephaly, alobar type; Schizencephaly associated with Hydranencephaly; Encephaloclastic porencephaly; Severe hydrocephalus; Variant type of Dandy-Walker cyst with dysgenesis of the corpus callosum; Arnold-Chiari malformation. The patients were initially seen OPD primarily for seizures and other complaints such as nystagmus with visual impairment, hypotonia, facial anomalies, Yolk-sac tumor, prematurity, dyspnea and hydrocephalus. Among these, Holoprosencephaly was easiest to diagnose because it was combined with facial anomalies. However the others required evaluation by CT. CT offers very efficient diagnostic modality which is better than a Cranial Echo. It is also safer than the invasive angiography and not as expensive as MRI.
...
PMID:[Congenital anomalies of the brain in computed tomography]. 276 27


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Next >>