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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We describe a single male infant who developed severe hydrops fetalis between 19 and 28 weeks of gestation. After delivery at 32 weeks he was treated by hemofiltration, prolonged ventilation and intravenous feeding. He had hypertelorism, orbital hypoplasia without proptosis, brachydactyly, frontal and temporal bossing of the skull, central
hypotonia
, communicating
hydrocephalus
, and severe delay in psychomotor development. Signs of connective tissue disorder included: osteopenia, pathological fracture, yellow/grey discolored teeth, blue sclerae and easy bruising. Laboratory investigations failed to reveal the cause of fetal hydrops or collagen abnormality. His mother and one sib had learning difficulties. Although some of these findings may be due to perinatal factors, the connective tissue abnormalities suggest a genetic syndrome in the heterogeneous group of osteogenesis imperfecta. This case either represents the more severe end of the spectrum of Type IV osteogenesis imperfecta or the mild end of the spectrum of Cole-Carpenter syndrome.
...
PMID:Osteopenia, abnormal dentition, hydrops fetalis and communicating hydrocephalus. 893 75
Deletions of the short arm of chromosome 6 are relatively rare, only 16 cases having been described in the literature so far. Here we present a detailed investigation by fluorescence in situ hybridisation of two further cases with different but overlapping interstitial deletions involving 6p22, 6p23 and 6p24. The main features involved are craniofacial malformations, heart and kidney defects, mental retardation/developmental delay,
hypotonia
and
hydrocephalus
. By using 36 yeast artificial chromosome and cosmid clones from a contig covering 6p22.3-6p25 and other probes with defined cytogenetic locations within 6p21-6p22 we have precisely localised the breakpoints involved in each of the cases, estimated the sizes of the deleted regions and defined the region that is hemizygously deleted in both cases.
...
PMID:A detailed investigation of two cases exhibiting characteristics of the 6p deletion syndrome. 879 22
We have evaluated a patient with Jacobsen syndrome. The patient presented with growth retardation,
hypotonia
, trigonocephaly, telecanthus, downward slanting palpebral fissures, bilateral inferior colobomas (of the iris, choroid, and retina),
hydrocephalus
, central nervous system (CNS) abnormalities, and an endocardial cushion defect, features commonly seen in Jacobsen syndrome. Endocrine evaluation showed growth hormone deficiency and central hypothyroidism. Chromosome analysis showed a 46,XX,del(11)(q23q25) de novo karyotype. Cytogenetically, the deletion appeared to include most of bands 11q23 and q24 and a portion of q25. Using chromosome specific paint probe, a combination of chromosome 11 centromere, telomere, and region specific cosmid probes from 11q14.1-14.3, 11q23.3, and 11q24.1, we have localised the deletion breakpoint to q24.1. Phenotype-karyotype correlation of patients with Jacobsen syndrome and specific deletions of chromosome 11q has enabled us to suggest that the critical region for this syndrome lies in close proximity to cytogenetic band 11q24. Although growth retardation is a consistent finding in 11q deletion syndrome, the presence of hypothalamic-pituitary hormone deficiency has not been reported previously.
...
PMID:Jacobsen syndrome: report of a patient with severe eye anomalies, growth hormone deficiency, and hypothyroidism associated with deletion 11 (q23q25) and review of 52 cases. 888 May 80
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
We report on two sisters of first degree cousin parents who were born with severe
hypotonia
, arthrogryposis multiplex congenita (AMC) and dysmorphic features consistent with the fetal akinesia/hypokinesia sequence. They needed assisted ventilation and each died at the age of 5 months. Both had type II lissencephaly (cobblestone lissencephaly) which was visualized by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the proband. Ophthalmic evaluation revealed no ocular malformations in either of them. Brain auditory evoked potentials (BAEP) revealed bilateral severe sensorineural hearing loss in the proband, whereas an MRI-guided open muscle biopsy of the sartorius muscle (the only remaining thigh muscle) showed features of muscular dystrophy. Immunohistochemistry revealed normal dystrophin, dystrophin-associated glycoproteins (DAG) and merosin. Certain clinical and pathological features distinguish the disease seen in these sisters from reported isolated cases where lethal AMC was associated with brain dysplasia and from the main syndromes of congenital muscular dystrophy/cobblestone lissencephaly. Differences from the Walker-Warburg syndrome, which simulates it in severity, included the absence of severe
hydrocephalus
, normal creatine kinase (for age) and minimal (mainly periventricular) white matter abnormalities. The findings suggest either an independent entity, in the studied family, or an allelic variation of the cobblestone lissencephaly (type II lissencephaly) syndrome.
...
PMID:Lethal congenital muscular dystrophy in two sibs with arthrogryposis multiplex: new entity or variant of cobblestone lissencephaly syndrome? 905 48
Deletions of chromosome 6q are rare. We report 3 new patients with 6q deletions. Case 1 is a male with an interstitial deletion [del(6)(q13q14.2)],
hypotonia
, speech delays, and minor anomalies. Case 2 is a male with an interstitial deletion [del(6)(q16.2q22.32)] and malformations, including truncus arteriosus and bilateral oligodactyly. Case 3 is a male with a terminal deletion [del(6)(q25.2)] with retinal pits,
hydrocephalus
, atrioventricular canal, and hydronephrosis. The findings in our patients and those from 57 previously reported cases demonstrated 3 phenotypic groups associated with 6q deletions. Group A [del(6)(q11-q16)] had a high incidence of hernias, upslanting palpebral fissures, and thin lips with lower frequency of microcephaly, micrognathia, and heart malformations. Group B [del(6)(q15-q25)] was associated with increased intrauterine growth retardation, abnormal respiration, hypertelorism, and upper limb malformations. Group C [del(6)(q25-qter)] was associated with retinal abnormalities, cleft palate, and genital hypoplasia. The only universal finding among all patients with 6q deletions was mental retardation. Other findings common to all 3 groups included ear anomalies (90%),
hypotonia
(82%), and postnatal growth retardation (68%).
...
PMID:New insights into the phenotypes of 6q deletions. 918 78
Achondroplasia (ACh) is the most frequent bone dysplasia. The mode of inheritance is autosomal dominant. The incident of neurological complications ranges between 20% and 47%; frequently the symptoms are subtle but are due to such serious conditions as cervicomedullary compressive syndromes, syringomyelia or
hydrocephalus
; thus, the early identification of this disorder is very important. We made a prospective study of 39 patients (20 female, 19 male) with ACh; their ages ranged from 3 months to 17 years (mean 4 years and 6 months). All patients had
hypotonia
and psychomotor delay; 3 had recurrent apnea, 1 developed radicular syndrome and 1 had leg paresthesias. The CT scan was normal in 5, 20 had cortical atrophy and 18 communicating
hydrocephalus
; we identified foramen magnum abnormalities in 28 patients, and reduced craniocervical junction with cervicomedullary compression in 6. Myelography and myelotomography demonstrated spinal compression in 12 patients. The MRI showed cervicomedullary infarct in 1, syringomyelia in 2 and diastematomyelia in 1. The somatosensory evoked responses (SSER) were very useful in the early identification of brain stem and spinal abnormalities. We concluded that the neurological manifestations of pediatric patients with ACh are frequent and very important, demanding comprehensive clinical evaluation even in asymptomatic patients, especially those with severe
hypotonia
or SSER alterations.
...
PMID:Early detection of neurological manifestations in achondroplasia. 920 56
We report a 22-year-old man with
hydrocephalus
caused by aqueductal stenosis. The patient was diagnosed with Kabuki make-up syndrome based on associated findings such as a peculiar facies, postnatal growth deficiency, brachydactyly of the fifth fingers, undescended testes, and malrotation of the colon. Kabuki make-up syndrome, recognized in Japan in 1981, is characterized by five cardinal manifestations: a peculiar facies, skeletal anomalies, dermatoglyphic anomalies, slight to moderate mental retardation, and postnatal dwarfism. Neurological anomalies have been reported to include neonatal
hypotonia
, feeding problems, seizures, West syndrome, microcephaly, brain atrophy, GH deficiency, precocious puberty, delayed sexual development, and diabetes insipidus. Aqueductal stenosis may be caused by part of the series of midline anomalies. Physicians should pay attention to associated anomalous characteristics suggesting a malformation syndrome when they encounter nontumoral aqueductal stenosis in adolescents or adults.
...
PMID:Kabuki make-up syndrome and report of a case with hydrocephalus. 969 34
We describe a girl with a brain-stem tumour and symptoms very similar to those of Rett syndrome (RS). Her early history was uneventful and development was normal (except for
hypotonia
). At the age of 6 months her development slowed. Subsequently, deterioration occurred and the features characteristic of RS were seen: loss of purposeful hand use, stereotypic hand movements, impaired social contact, decelerated head growth, and ataxia. Cerebral CT at the age of 3 years and 4 months revealed a tumour in the region of the pons and
hydrocephalus
. We suggest that a pons/midbrain tumour appearing at an early age may affect the developing CNS and cause symptoms similar to those of RS. A possible causal connection between midbrain pathology and RS is supported by this case.
...
PMID:Pons tumour behind a phenotypic Rett syndrome presentation. 988 80
Deletions of the short arm of chromosome 6 are relatively rare, the main features being developmental delay, craniofacial malformations,
hypotonia
, and defects of the heart and kidney, with
hydrocephalus
and eye abnormalities occurring in some instances. We present the molecular cytogenetic investigation of six cases with 6p deletions and two cases with unbalanced translocations resulting in monosomy of the distal part of 6p. The breakpoints of the deletions have been determined accurately by using 55 well-mapped probes and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). The cases can be grouped into two distinct categories: interstitial deletions within the 6p22-p24 segment and terminal deletions within the 6p24-pter segment. Characteristics correlating with specific regions are: short neck, clinodactyly or syndactyly, brain, heart and kidney defects with deletions within 6p23-p24; and corneal opacities/iris coloboma/Rieger anomaly, hypertelorism and deafness with deletions of 6p25. The two cases with unbalanced translocations presented with a Larsen-like syndrome including some characteristics of the 6p deletion syndrome, which can be explained by the deletion of 6p25. Such investigation of cytogenetic abnormalities of 6p using FISH techniques and a defined set of probes will allow a direct comparison of reported cases and enable more accurate diagnosis as well as prognosis in patients with 6p deletions.
...
PMID:Delineation of two distinct 6p deletion syndromes. 1007 Nov 94
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