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)

A girl presents immediately post partum with postures and movements typical for severe muscular hypotonia (floppy infant). Her sucking and swallowing abilities are reduced. There is marked drooling. Broad alveolar ridges give the impression of a high-arched palate. Floppy infant-screening (muscle enzymes, EMG, NCV) was within normal ranges apart from a slight elevation of aldolase. Muscle biopsy performed at the age of two years revealed the diagnosis of nemaline myopathy. An onset of the disease with severe muscular hypotonia during neonatal period usually is linked with rapidly progressing, mostly lethal outcome. Our patient--in contrast--seems to suffer from a mild form.
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PMID:[Nemaline myopathy: an unusual course]. 164 15

Congenital hypotonia with favorable outcome is characterized by an early neonatal onset and a benign clinical course. The old term, proposed by Walton, was benign congenital hypotonia, denoting the presence of muscle weakness and hypotonia, with the exception of Werdnig-Hoffmann disease. It has been clear that this term includes congenital myopathies with definite changes in the muscle fiber. However, many cases remain unclarified. The term congenital hypotonia with favorable outcome includes only these last cases. A long-term follow-up study of children with congenital hypotonia with favorable outcome is presented, and a hypothetical mechanism underlying muscle shortening is discussed. The study was carried out at the Department of Child Neuropsychiatric Sciences, University "La Sapienza" of Rome, during the period 1985-2000, and included 41 patients with congenital hypotonia. Our study confirms the good prognosis of congenital hypotonia with favorable outcome and suggests a correlation with joint hyperlaxity, which is observed in many parents of our children, as if the latter developed from the former. On the basis of experimental changes occurring in the muscles, we believe that in our cohort the main cause of shortening is caused by an increase in joint mobility, which keeps muscles shortened in both the passive and active states for a long time. If this view is confirmed by other studies, we suggest continuous muscle exercise as a preventive treatment.
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PMID:Congenital hypotonia with favorable outcome. 1205

Floppy infant syndrome (FIS) refers to a condition wherein an infant manifests generalized hypotonia since birth or in early life. It is heterogeneous and can be caused by various central nervous system disorders, neuromuscular diseases and genetic disorders. X-linked myotubular myopathy (XMTM) is a progressive congenital myopathy morphologically characterized by the presence of centrally placed nuclei in numerous muscle fibers without any other particular pathological abnormalities. Patients are frequently born with floppiness and respiratory distress. The vast majority of patients carry a truncating or missense mutation in MTM1. The authors report here a full term male baby with clinicopathological features of XMTM. The diagnosis is validated by the finding of a c. 141-144delAGAA mutation ofMTM1. To the best of the authors' knowledge, the present case is the first genetically confirmed XMTM in Thailand. A brief review of various neuromuscular disorders causing floppy infant syndrome is also included.
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PMID:Floppy infant caused by MTM1 mutation: a first genetically-confirmed X-linked myotubular myopathy patient in Thailand. 1658 89

We report the case of a 7 month-old girl that presented with acute anemia, generalized muscular hypotonia and failure to thrive. Laboratory evaluation revealed cobalamin deficiency, due to a vegan diet of the mother. The clinical triad of an acquired floppy baby syndrome with megaloblastic anemia and failure to thrive is pathognomic for infantile cobalamin deficiency. Neurological abnormalities are often irreversible and may be associated with delayed myelinization in the MRI. A normal cobalamin level in maternal serum and absence of anemia do not exclude subclinical deficiency. If cobalamin deficiency is suspected, e.g. in pregnant women on vegan diet, urinary methylmalonic acid excretion and plasma homocysteine levels should be determined and cobalamin substitution should be started at an early stage to avoid potentially irreversible damage of the fetus.
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PMID:[Floppy baby with macrocytic anemia and vegan mother]. 1829 83

Floppy infant syndrome, also sometimes referred to as rag-doll syndrome, is characterized by hypotonia that could present as either peripheral hypotonia or central. Depending on the origin of hypotonia, the infant will present with different symptoms that ultimately have the characteristic feature of hypotonia. The clinical examination is crucial in diagnosing floppy infant syndrome in the neonate period, but the most critical factor is investigating and diagnosing the underlying cause of hypotonia. Regardless of whether the underlying cause of hypotonia is peripheral or central in origin, the presentation of floppy infant syndrome focuses on observing for the presence or absence of specific signs such as 'frog-leg' posture, significant head lag on traction or pull-to-sit maneuver, or the feeling of 'slipping through the hands' when the infant is held under the arms. Infantile botulism, transient neonatal myasthenia gravis, congenital myasthenia gravis, hypermagnesemia, and aminoglycoside toxicity are all neuromuscular junction disorders that are considered to be a differential diagnosis of floppy infant syndrome. These neuromuscular junction disorders ultimately impact the presence of acetylcholine within the neuromuscular junction. While some of these disorders may impact the acetylcholine receptors, others may cause a depletion within the end-plate anticholinesterase enzyme. A deficiency within the anticholinesterase deficiency may cause desensitization to acetylcholine, which could also cause present with floppy infant syndrome as well. Depending on the underlying causative disorder leading to the presence of floppy infant syndrome, the treatment will vary considerably. Treatment of the underlying causative syndrome resulting in the presentation of floppy infant syndrome deals with the symptoms of hypotonia, and as a result, the decreased muscle tone, diminished tendon reflexes, any feeding or respiratory difficulties diminish.
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PMID:Neuromuscular Junction Disorders and Floppy Infant Syndrome: A Comprehensive Review. 3207 26