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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Northwest Regional Screening Program to detect congenital hypothyroidism in infants born in Oregon, Montana, Alaska, and Idaho (combined birthrate of 69,000/ yr) was added to our ongoing screening program in 1975. The program utilizes dried blood filter paper specimens collected routinely in the first few days of life in all four states and again at about 6 weeks of age in Oregon only. The screening test consist of an initial thyroxine (T4) measurement; a thyroid-stimulating hormore (TSH) determination is performed on those specimens with T4 concentrations in the lowest 3% group. Serum samples obtained by venipuncture are requested for confirmation of the diagnosis. In the first two years of the program, 25 infants with primary
hypothyroidism
were detected amont 110,667 infants screened, a frequency of 1:4,430. Fourteen cases of thyroxine-binding globulin deficiency were also detected, a frequency of 1:7,900. Using the T4 followed by TSH testing approach, the frequency of request for repeat specimens was 0.4% in Oregon and 0.05% in the other states. The cost per specimen was $1.96. The majority of infants lacked clinical signs or symptoms of
hypothyroidism
; only one infant was clinically suspected of having
hypothyroidism
prior to detection. The most common neonatal symptoms were constipation, lethargy, and prolonged jaundice, while the most common physical signs were
hypotonia
, umbilical hernia, and large fontanels. Thyroid scans showed the most common etiology to be thyroid aplasia, followed by an ectopic gland, hypoplasia, and goiter. Serum T4 concentrations were lowest in those infants with aplasia, intermediate in infants with an ectopic gland or hypoplasia, and normal in the infant with the goiter. Neonatal
hypothyroidism
varies in degree and has several different causes; the capacity to secrete thyroid hormone, the duration before
hypothyroidism
becomes clinically manifest, and possibly the eventual prognosis for intellectual function depend on the nature of the underlying cause. While the mean age at treatment was 59 days, the goal of diagnosing congenital hypothyroidism and treating affected infants by 1 month of age seems realistic.
...
PMID:Neonatal hypothyroidism detected by the Northwest Regional Screening Program. 10 59
We describe a 21-month-old girl with typical manifestations of the acrocallosal syndrome of craniofacial anomalies, agenesis of the corpus callosum, hallucal duplication, severe
hypotonia
, and psychomotor retardation. Our patient also had the Dandy-Walker malformation, imperforate anus with rectovaginal fistula, hypothalamic dysfunction with
hypothyroidism
and diabetes insipidus, thick, dysplastic pulmonic valve leaflets, central and obstructive apnea, and pulmonary hypertension. These findings add to the delineation of this syndrome.
...
PMID:Acrocallosal syndrome: new findings. 272 49
Various degrees of persistent or paroxysmal paresis involving only the hindlimbs or all four limbs were observed in 3 dogs with
hypothyroidism
and lymphocytic thyroiditis. Clinical features included lethargy, obesity, alopecia, insidious and progressive paresis,
hypotonia
, and slow segmental reflexes in 2 dogs. Obesity, alopecia, paroxysmal paresis, and behavior change were observed in the third dog. Laboratory tests indicated that thyroid function was less than normal in all 3 dogs. Abnormal electromyographic potentials and slow motor nerve conduction velocities were found in each dog. Muscle biopsy specimen abnormalities included selective type-II myofiber atrophy in all dogs, whereas one dog had angular atrophy of type-I and type-II myofibers indicative of denervation. A substance that stained with para-aminosalicylic acid was observed within vacuoles of type-I myofibers in one dog. Lymphocytic thyroiditis characterized by lymphocytic infiltration of excised thyroid glands was observed in all dogs.
...
PMID:Neuromuscular abnormalities associated with hypothyroidism and lymphocytic thyroiditis in three dogs. 355 92
The effect of induced
hypothyroidism
(by feeding an antithyroid drug-propylthiouracil) on the transport and clearance of the routinely used hepatobiliary radiopharmaceuticals--radioiodinated iodine-131 (131I) rose bengal and technetium-99m-N-(4-n-butylphenylcarbamoylmethyl) iminodiacetate, was studied in the rats.
Hypothyroidism
was associated with depressed growth and retarded clearance of these radiotracers from the in vivo system. Treatment of the hypothyroid rats with thyroxine (2-5 micrograms/100 g b.w. day) for 6 wk, restored these parameters towards normal values. These data suggest that delayed clearance of these hepatobiliary tracers could be related to reduced metabolic rate accompanied with the
hypotonia
and hypomotility of intestine normally observed in the hypothyroid state.
...
PMID:Effect of altered thyroid status on the transport of hepatobiliary radiopharmaceuticals. 404 61
Based on a case report, the combined occurrence of a hypopituitary crisis and acute renal failure (ARF) is discussed. Aetiologically, the patient's disease dates back to an operation on the pituitary gland 40 years previously followed by a panhypopituitarism. The course of the disease presented initial symptoms which did not suggest a hypopituitary crisis to the first physician. The patient was hospitalized primarily on the tentative diagnosis of encephalitis. Subsequently, both laboratory findings and sonography of the abdomen pointed to chronic renal failure. The severity of the clinical course led to the transfer of the patient to our hospital for haemodialysis. Examination of the soporous patient revealed in addition to symptoms of ARF based on ambilateral pyelonephritic nephrocirrhosis typical cardinal symptoms of an endocrine insufficiency. Sopor, serious exsiccosis, pale, cool, pigmentless skin, deficiency of axillary and pubic hair, gonadal atrophy,
hypotonia
, hypothermia, bradypnoea and bradycardia as well as anamnesis of the patient substantiated the tentative diagnosis of a hypophysical coma based on hypopituitarism, clinically dominated by
hypothyroidism
. Following an immediately launched hormone substitution in combination with haemodialysis the state of the patient improved. However, during the fifth haemodialysis cardiac arrest occurred, the cause of which was put down to a dysequilibrium syndrome. The cause, however, must be seen in a continuing stress situation, inadequate hormone substitution and in sedation with diazepam. After reanimation the patient was transferred to the ICU.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Pituitary crisis and acute renal failure--a case report]. 814 59
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
Nineteen cases of duplication of segments of the long arm of chromosome X have been published in 13 males and in 6 females. We report an additional case of a male with growth and mental retardation, growth hormone deficiency, compensated primary
hypothyroidism
, distinctive anomalies of the face, hypoplastic genitalia, and
hypotonia
in whom inverted duplication of a segment in the long arm of X chromosome was diagnosed, 46,Y, dup (X)(q21.2q13.3), and mosaicism was demonstrated in his mother's X chromosome. The rearranged segment was diagnosed utilizing high resolution G-band technique and FISH studies, using chromosome X total chromosome probe and DNA XIST probe. This appears to be the first report of a patient with duplication of Xq and
hypothyroidism
.
...
PMID:Inherited inverted duplication of X chromosome in a male: report of a patient and review of the literature. 937 22
The main manifestations of neuromuscular disease in the newborn period are
hypotonia
and weakness. Infants with severe
hypotonia
but only marginal weakness usually do not have a disorder of the lower motor unit. These infants may have genetic conditions, metabolic disturbances, congenital heart disease,
hypothyroidism
, sepsis, or other systemic disorders. Early on, neonates with central nervous system pathology may present with profound
hypotonia
, decreased reflexes, and moderate to severe but transient weakness. However, they also tend to have seizures, obtundation, cranial nerve signs, or history of perinatal asphyxia.
...
PMID:Neuromuscular disorders in the newborn. 939 65
Congenital panhypopituitarism is a rare disease. It may be a complication of tumors, craniocerebral trauma, infection, granulomatous diseases, vascular pathologies, etc. In many cases no primary disease causing panhypopituitarism is found (idiopathic form). A potential reason is interruption of the pituitary stalk due to ischemic etiology in patients with cord encirclement and/or other birth injuries leading to interruption of the axonal transport of ADH and oxytocin as well as hypothalamic releasing hormones. This explains the ectopy of the neurohypophysis without diabetes insipidus and the hypoplasia of the adenohypophysis. GH-deficiency causes short stature and metabolic disturbances, LH-FSH-deficiency amenorrhoea/oligomenorrhoea, loss of libido and secondary sexual characteristics, TRH-deficiency
hypothyroidism
and ACTH-deficiency
hypotonia
, weakness, loss of pigmentation. We report a case of congenital panhypopituitarism. MR imaging of the brain revealed a hypoplastic adenohypophysis and a hypoplastic pituitary stalk which was interrupted in its superior segment. An ectopic neurohypophysis was found located in the area of the hypothalamus ("hypothalamic hot spot"). The ectopic neurohypophysis showed strong enhancement after intravenous application of Gd-DTPA. MR imaging of the hypothalamic-hypophyseal axis is well suited for the differentiation between congenital and acquired forms of panhypopituitarism in clinically uncertain cases.
...
PMID:[Neuro-MR-findings in primary panhypopituitarism]. 979 7
The occurrence of neurological symptoms and developmental delay in patients affected by congenital hypothyroidism (CH) has been attributed to the lack of thyroid hormone in the developing CNS. Accordingly, after the introduction of neonatal screening programs for CH, which allowed early and adequate treatment, an almost normal outcome for most CH patients could be achieved. However, a few patients did not reach this favorable outcome despite early and adequate treatment. Here we describe five patients with variable degrees of CH who suffered from choreoathetosis, muscular
hypotonia
, and pulmonary problems, an association of symptoms that had not been described before this study. Since this clinical picture matched the phenotype of mice targeted for deletion of the transcription factor gene Nkx2-1, we investigated the human NKX2-1 gene in these five patients. We found heterozygous loss of function mutations in each of these five patients, e.g., one complete gene deletion, one missense mutation (G2626T), and three nonsense mutations (2595insGG, C2519A, C1302A). Therefore, the unfavorable outcome in patients with CH, especially those with choreoathetosis and pulmonary symptoms, can be explained by mutations in the NKX2-1 gene rather than by
hypothyroidism
. Moreover, the association of symptoms in the patients with NKX2-1 mutations points to an important role of human NKX2-1 in the development and function of thyroid, basal ganglia, and lung, as already described for rodents.
...
PMID:Choreoathetosis, hypothyroidism, and pulmonary alterations due to human NKX2-1 haploinsufficiency. 1185 16
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