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

We report cystinuria and symptoms of cerebellar atrophy in a 45-year-old man. His parents were first cousins, and many members of his family had stones of urinary tract or gait impairment. Neurological examination disclosed cerebellar signs resembling those of spinocerebellar degeneration. Urinalysis disclosed high cystine, lysine, ornitine and arginine output. Cystine was 1153.8 micro mol/day (normal range, 22-170); lysine, 3443.9 (normal range, 44-1000); ornitine, 283.8 (normal range, 7-40); and arginine, 154.0 (normal range, 9-50). Neurological complications reported to be associated with cystinuria include mental retardation, muscular dystrophy, hypotonia and dwarfism, mongolism, paroxysmal dyskinesia, myopathy, migraine, spastic paraplegia, multiple sclerosis, subacute combined degeneration and cranial polyneuropathy. Cerebellar signs have been reported in only two cases, and to our knowledge, this is the first case of cystinuria with cerebellar atrophy ever reported. Some common metabolic errors may have caused both disorders, although they also may have developed independently.
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PMID:[Cystinuria with symptoms of cerebellar atrophy--a case report]. 189 74

We report a family with an undiagnosed X linked condition. The grandmother, two of her three daughters, and one of her grand-daughters have a slowly progressive proximal weakness, brisk reflexes, poor bladder function, static reduced night vision, and IgG2 deficiency. The diagnosis of the three living symptomatic females was "hereditary spastic paraplegia plus". They have lost five male children who died in the neonatal period of severe hypotonia and were of low birth weight. Investigations have not led to a unifying diagnosis: myotonic dystrophy, NARP, and X linked hyper IgM were specifically eliminated. Using the hypothesis that the condition is X linked dominant, haplotype analysis of the family suggests that the disease locus is within Xq26-qter. This entity should be considered in the differential diagnosis of families presenting with severe neonatal hypotonia in males and females with symptoms suggestive of complex hereditary spastic paraplegia.
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PMID:Male neonatal death and progressive weakness and immune deficiency in females: an unknown X linked condition. 778 67

Segawa's disease (SD) is a hereditary progressive dystonia with marked diurnal fluctuation with onset in childhood or adolescence and a striking responsiveness to L-dopa. Here we describe a typical case of SD in a 28 year old woman whose disease begun at the age of 18 years. This patient had a second cousin with probable hereditary spastic paraplegia (Strumpell's familiar spastic paraplegia) who had no benefit on a recent L-dopa trial. Due to this family history our patient had been misdiagnosed as Strumpell's disease for more than 10 years. There was no other apparent case of SD in the family. Her father had an atypical gait but was otherwise normal. Her daughter had motor developmental delay due to hypotonia. Pes cavus was a common feature to the patient, her father and her cousin.
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PMID:[Segawa's disease: progressive dystonia responsive to L-dopa. A case report]. 814 58

A new sclerosing bone disease in two Japanese siblings born to first-degree cousin parents is reported. Clinically the disease is characterized by early developmental delay, hypotonia and later spastic paraplegia. The unique radiographic changes consist of peripheral osteosclerosis affecting predominantly metaphyses of the long bones and to a lesser degree ends of the ribs and clavicles, iliac crests, acetabulae, ischio-pubic synchondroses and vertebrae. The epiphyses are sclerotic in early life. The round bones, short tubular bones and the skull are little affected. The shafts of the tubular bones are osteopenic. Increased serum alkaline phosphatase was the only laboratory abnormality detected. We suggest the name "osteosclerotic metaphyseal dysplasia" for this disorder.
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PMID:Osteosclerotic metaphyseal dysplasia. 825 49

We report on clinical and cytogenetic data on 5 children and 2 adults with a de novo inverted duplication of the short arm of chromosome 8, and we give a review of 26 patients from the literature. The clinical picture in young children is characterized by minor facial anomalies, hypotonia, and severe developmental delay. In older patients the facial traits are less characteristic, spastic paraplegia develops, and severe orthopedic problems are frequent. Psychomotor retardation is always severe-to-profound. Duplication of 8p21-p22 results in a clinically recognizable multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome. It is shown that in all patients examined, the duplication was accompanied by a deletion of the most terminal part of 8p.
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PMID:Inversion duplication of the short arm of chromosome 8: clinical data on seven patients and review of the literature. 859 64

This study presents a family with a syndromic form of X-linked mental retardation in which four males in two generations present severe mental retardation, slowly progressive spastic paraplegia, facial hypotonia, and maxillary hypoplasia. Multipoint linkage analysis with 24 highly polymorphic markers indicated two possible candidate regions: Xp21.1-Xq21.3 (flanking markers DXS1214 and DXS990) and Xq23-Xq27.1 (flanking markers DXS8020 and DXS984). The two known loci for X-linked mental retardation and spastic paraplegia are excluded: proteolipid protein in Xp21 and L1 cell adhesion molecule in Xq28. Therefore, the syndrome in this family appears to represent a previously undescribed X-linked spastic paraplegia-mental retardation syndrome.
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PMID:Novel syndromic form of X-linked complicated spastic paraplegia. 1098 73

We report the case of a 23-month-old male with hypotonia, developmental delay, and complex seizures. Radiographs revealed profound sclerosis of the metaphyses and epiphyses of the long and short bones in the extremities, with a unique pattern of distribution. Sclerosis also involved the anterior ribs, iliac crests, talus, and calcaneus. The skull and vertebral bodies appeared unaffected. Blood lead levels were normal. We believe that this constellation of clinical and radiographic abnormalities closely resembles osteosclerotic metaphyseal dysplasia (OMD) due to an autosomal recessive defect. Characteristic skeletal findings were instrumental in determining the diagnosis. OMD is a very rare sclerosing bone disorder, first described in 1993. The syndrome is characterized clinically by developmental delay of a progressive nature, hypotonia, elevated alkaline phosphatase, and late-onset spastic paraplegia. We encountered a young child with these neurologic symptoms who displayed sclerotic metaphyseal changes on hand radiographs obtained to determine the bone age. Lead poisoning, a known cause of metaphyseal sclerosis, was initially suspected. Careful analysis of the metaphyseal bone changes helped to distinguish this bone dysplasia from lead poisoning and other causes of metaphyseal sclerosis.
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PMID:Osteosclerotic metaphyseal dysplasia: a skeletal dysplasia that may mimic lead poisoning in a child with hypotonia and seizures. 1249 29

Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease and X-linked spastic paraplegia type 2 are two sides of the same coin. Both arise from mutations in the gene encoding myelin proteolipid protein. The disease spectrum for Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease and spastic paraplegia type 2 is extraordinarily broad, ranging from a spastic gait in the pure form of spastic paraplegia type 2 to a severely disabling form of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease featuring hypotonia, respiratory distress, stridor, nystagmus, and profound myelin loss. The diverse disease spectrum is mirrored by the underlying pathogenesis, in which a blockade at any stage of myelin proteolipid protein synthesis and assembly into myelin spawns a unique phenotype. The continuing definition of pathogenetic mechanisms operative in Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease and spastic paraplegia type 2, together with advances in neural cell transplant therapy, augurs well for future treatment of the severe forms of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease.
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PMID:Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease and spastic paraplegia type 2: two faces of myelin loss from mutations in the same gene. 1457 40

Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) deficiency is a rare autosomal recessive disorder mapped to chromosome 11p15.5. Its clinical expression varies with presentations as dopa-responsive dystonia (recessive Segawa's disease), dopa-responsive infantile parkinsonism, dopa-responsive spastic paraplegia, progressive infantile encephalopathy or dopa-non-responsive dystonia. We describe a 7-year-old boy with progressive infantile encephalopathy and non-responsiveness to dopamine. The patient demonstrated generalized hypotonia, pyramidal tract dysfunction and temperature instability after the second month of life. Dystonia, tremor and oculogyric crises complicated the clinical picture during the following months. Neurotransmitter analysis in CSF disclosed almost undetectable levels of HVA and MHPG, whereas serum prolactin was profoundly increased. Subsequent molecular analysis revealed homozygosity for a missense mutation (c.707T>C) in the TH gene. l-Dopa therapy in both high and low doses resulted in massive hyperkinesias, while substitution with selegiline exerted only a mild beneficial effect. Today, at the age of 7 years, the patient demonstrates severe developmental retardation with marked trunkal hypotonia, hypokinesia and occasionally dystonic and/or hyperkinetic crises. He is the third Greek patient with TH deficiency to be reported. Since all three patients carry the same pathogenetic mutation, a founder effect is suspected.
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PMID:Tyrosine hydroxylase deficiency with severe clinical course. 1928 9

Thyroid hormones are known to be essential for growth, development and metabolism. Recently mutations in the SLC16A2 gene coding for the monocarboxylate thyroid hormone transporter 8, MCT8, have been associated with Allan-Herndon-Dudley syndrome (AHDS), an X-linked condition characterized by severe mental retardation, dysarthria, athetoid movements, muscle hypoplasia and spastic paraplegia. Here we describe in detail the clinical and biochemical features in a boy affected by AHDS with severe neurological abnormalities and a novel de novo SLC16A2 gene insertion, 1343-1344insGCCC, resulting in a truncated protein lacking the last four transmembrane domains (TMDs) as well as the carboxyl cytoplasmic end. He presents mental retardation, axial hypotonia, hypertonia of arms and legs, paroxysmal dyskinesias, seizures. The endocrine phenotype showed low serum total and free thyroxine (T4), very elevated total and free triiodothyronine (T3) and normal thyrotropin (TSH) with blunted response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH). The latter finding was unexpected and suggested that the lack of functional MCT8 was counterbalanced at the thyrotrope cell level by high serum T3 concentration and/or by increased intrapituitary type 2 deiodinase (D2) activity. Our case constitutes a relevant contribution to better characterize this disorder and to elucidate the functional consequences of SLC16A2 gene mutations.
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PMID:Allan-Herndon-Dudley syndrome (AHDS) caused by a novel SLC16A2 gene mutation showing severe neurologic features and unexpectedly low TRH-stimulated serum TSH. 2071 92


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