Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The article describes pregnancies and labors of five women with myotonic muscular dystrophy and their four severely involved infants, and reviews the pertinent literature. Three of the four neonatal cases died by 3 weeks of age of respiratory failure or aspiration; the fourth infant is now 4 months old and has respiratory and swallowing difficulties. The symptoms of myotonic dystrophy worsen during pregnancy. A high rate of fetal loss occurs due to spontaneous abortion, prematurity, and neonatal involvement with the disease. Prolonged labor has been described as a consistent complication, but the evidence does not justify this conclusion. Although many neonates with myotonic dystrophy are asymptomatic, severely affected newborns have a recognizable disorder unrelated to the severity of the maternal disease. The most common clinical manifestations in the neonate are arthrogryposis involving predominantly the lower extremilies, generalized
hypotonia
and weakness, and pharyngeal weakness. Less constant features include polyhydramnios, facial
diplegia
, diaphragmatic paralysis, respiratory failure, decreased motility of the gastrointestinal tract, congenital cataracts, and electrocardiographic abnormalities.
...
PMID:Clinical effects of myotonic dystrophy on pregnancy and the neonate. 77 28
A clinical and genetic study of congenital myotonic dystrophy in Britain has been carried out in 70 patients from 54 sibships. The clinical aspects are analysed here, and the existence of a syndrome clinically distinct from myotonic dystrophy of later onset is confirmed. Characteristic features included neonatal
hypotonia
, motor and mental retardation, and facial
diplegia
. A high incidence of talipes occurs at birth together with hydramnios and reduced fetal movements during pregnancy, factors suggesting prenatal onset of the disorder in many cases. Prolonged survival is the rule after infancy, but the occurrence of numerous neonatal deaths in the sibships suggests the existence of unrecognized cases dying in the neonatal period.
...
PMID:Congenital myotonic dystrophy in Britain. I. Clinical aspects. 110 35
Observations relating to 18 cases of the neonatal form of myotonic dystrophy are described. These consisted of 9 cases of severe forms incompatible with survival, characterised by major respiratory disorders, hypotrophia and difficulty in swallowing, associated with a facial
diplegia
and pes equinus. The other 9 patients suffered from more moderate, not lethal forms. In addition to muscular troubles manifested by precocious
hypotonia
, the disease involved serious mental retardation. The absence of myotonia was constant in the very young infants. Anomalies in pregnancies resulting in the birth of children suffering from a neonatal form of myotonic dystrophy are analysed and their frequency is emphasized. From the genetic point of view, the elective transmission of myotonic dystrophy by the mothers was found in all the cases. The knowledge of neonatal forms must be taken into consideration for genetic counseling.
...
PMID:[Clinical and genetic aspects of the early form of Steinert's dystrophia myotonica]. 121 49
A five-year old boy was the product of a 40 week pregnancy by vertex presentation complicated only by threatened abortion at approximately 8 weeks gestation. Apgar score was 5 after one minute. At birth he was noted to have a generalized
hypotonia
associated with facial
diplegia
, small mandible, weak suck and swallow reflexes. Admission examination revealed small mandible, mask-like facial expression and mild mental retardation. Cranial nerve examination showed bilateral blepharoptosis and facial nerve palsies. Pupil reflexes were normal, but corneal reflexes were impaired bilaterally. Diplopia due to the left abducens nerve palsy was suggested. There was no atrophy of the tongue. Motor tone, strength, and deep tendon reflexes were normal. A normal 46 XY karyotype was present. The other clinical and laboratory findings were normal. MRI of the brain was unremarkable. The characteristics of electrophysiological studies were summarized as follows: 1) Auditory brainstem evoked responses demonstrated waveforms IV-V were abnormal because their amplitudes were less than 30% of wave I bilaterally. 2) Somatosensory evoked potentials documented by central conduction times from cervical region to sensory cortex were prolonged on both sides. 3) Facial nerve conduction velocity was calculated by evoked EMGs of the mentalis muscle electrically stimulated at two distal points over the marginal mandibular branch. MCV of the left side was reduced (34.2 m/sec). 4) The amplitude of the facial muscle potentials evoked by facial nerve stimulation was reduced on both sides. 5) Blink reflex responses documented by the latency difference of R1 responses between the two sides were prolonged.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of Moebius syndrome--electrophysiological studies of facial nerve and brainstem]. 181 86
Six cases of congenital myotonic dystrophy are described. Only two survived the neonatal period. There were seven neonatal deaths in the immediate families and six reported miscarriages. Of the two survivors one is moderately retarded and the other at 9 months is at the developmental level of 5-6 months. Facial
diplegia
and depressed deep tendon reflexes are clues to the presence of neonatal myotonic dystrophy and the diagnosis is confirmed by examining the mother who will show some of the features of the disorder. Infants may also present with non-specific respiratory problems,
hypotonia
and poor sucking.
...
PMID:Neonatal myotonic dystrophy. 320 37
Myotonic dystrophy in the neonate is commonly accompanied by facial
diplegia
, generalized muscular
hypotonia
, talipes equinovarus, and muscular respiratory failure. The gastrointestinal manifestations of this disease include poor sucking, choking, regurgitation, aspiration, and swallowing difficulties. Gastroparesis can be a major contributor to the feeding difficulties experienced by these infants. We report on an infant with congenital myotonic dystrophy in whom a severe gastric motility problem was alleviated by metoclopramide therapy. This smooth muscle manifestation may be an important and potentially remediable source of morbidity in these infants.
...
PMID:Gastroparesis in neonatal myotonic dystrophy. 654 2
Eighty infants with cerebral palsy including monoplegia,
diplegia
, quadriplegia, hemiplegia, choreoathetosis,
hypotonia
with mental retardation and cerebellar ataxia, underwent Computed Cranial Tomography (CCT). Specific morphological anomalies such as ventricular dilatation with or without diverticulum, cortical atrophy, low density areas and calcifications, occur with varying frequency in each clinical groups. There exists a good correlation between the pathogenesis of the lesions, clinical data and CCT pictures.
...
PMID:Cranial computerized tomography in cerebral palsy. An attempt at anatomo-clinical and radiological correlations. 720 4
To evaluate the topographical neurological distribution, patterns of abnormal tone and related functional neuromotor impairment after grade 3 and grade 4 intraventricular/periventricular haemorrhage (IPVH), 33 children with previous grade 3 or 4 IPVH of mean gestational age 30.9 weeks (range 25-40 weeks) and mean birth weight 1743 g (range 866-3600 g) were examined neurologically at 4.7 years (range 0.75-10.8 years). Neurological signs were absent in 10/33 cases which were equally distributed between the grade 3 and grade 4 IPVH groups. The largest single topographical neurological distribution was hemiparesis in 8/23, followed jointly by
diplegia
(cerebral paraplegia) in 6/23 and triplegia in 6/23 cases and finally quadriplegia in 3/23 cases. Grade 4 IPVH tended to result in asymmetrical syndromes, accounting for 7/8 cases of hemiparesis and 5/6 cases of triplegia, whereas all 3/3 cases of quadriplegia followed grade 3 IPVH. The 6/23 cases of
diplegia
were shared between the grade 3 and grade 4 IPVH groups. Tone was normal in 7/8 of the hemiparetic subjects. Dystonia was the commonest tone abnormality, affecting 8/23 children with neurological disturbance, followed by ataxia/
hypotonia
in 4/23 and mixed dystonia/
hypotonia
in 3/23. Only 1/23 cases had signs of spasticity. Spasticity is rare following severe IPVH. Diplegic children had a better functional neuromotor grade than hemiparetic children, who in turn did better than triplegic children. Ataxia
hypotonia
resulted in better functional outcome than dystronia, which in turn was more favourable than mixed tone patterns. Cranial imaging by ultrasound (US) or computed tomographic (CT) scanning proved an unreliable prognostic indicator except in the case of hemiparesis, for which US scans correctly predicted the affected side in 5/7 cases. The neurological syndromes following severe IPVH differ from the classical encephalopathy of prematurity, and this should lead to a re-appraisal of the trends in the prevalence of cerebral palsy. Caution should be exercised in the interpretation of cranial imaging with regard to pessimistic prognoses in the presence of changes or undue optimism in their absence.
...
PMID:Heterogeneity of neurological syndromes in survivors of grade 3 and 4 periventricular haemorrhage. 840 2
Clinical observations of 68 preterm and term newborns with ultrasonographically diagnosed PVL treated in the Infant Department of the Child Health Center in Warsaw from January 1985 to December 1990 are presented. The most frequent clinical sign in newborns was
hypotonia
of the lower extremities. Tremors were significantly more frequent in preterms. During the infant period, more clinical signs occurred in connection with cerebral atrophy (ventriculomegaly and subdural space enlargement). Observations were carried from the neonatal period to the age of 6 years. Development of 42 (61.8%) children was normal. In 26 (38.2%) infants from 6 to 12 months old, cerebral palsy (most frequently
diplegia
) was diagnosed. No significant differences in the frequency of cerebral palsy between terms and preterms were found. Epilepsy and minimal brain dysfunctions were also present.
...
PMID:[Estimate of clinical dynamic in periventricular leukomalacia]. 892 87
Steinert's syndrome is a systemic disease with autosome mother-to-child transmission, characterized by myotonia and muscular dystrophia. The syndrome's clinical characteristics include: respiratory and alimentation diseases, facial
diplegia
, generalized
hypotonia
, areflexia, atrophy, arthrogryposis, hydramnios, retard in psychomotor development, cataract and genital disorders. A case of pregnancy occurs in Steinert syndrome's patient with hydramnios as a predominant symptom, is presented. At birth, in the congenital neonatal form, there is grave, generalized
hypotonia
which causes a very quick death of the newborn. There are not many characters which can be found out by ultrasound: hydramnios, reduction of fetal tone and active movements, micrognathia. Consequently it is of the utmost importance in those cases an adequate prenatal genetic counseling and a correct obstetrical management.
...
PMID:[A rare cause of polyhydramnios: Steinert's syndrome. A clinical case report]. 916 86
1
2
3
Next >>