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)

The acrocallosal syndrome (ACS) is a rare malformation syndrome characterized by a distinct pattern of craniofacial, brain and limb anomalies. It was first described by Schinzel in 1979 and followed by 25 other cases reported in the literature. Neurodevelopmental aspects include hypotonia of prenatal onset, seizures and moderate to severe mental retardation. The condition is probably of autosomal recessive inheritance but is closely resembles the Greig cephalopolysyndactyly syndrome (GCPS), an autosomal dominantly inherited disorder mapped to the short arm of chromosome seven. We reviewed the literature for aspects of associated cystic malformations in addition to agenesis of the corpus callosum and report on another patient with ACS. Prognosis is dependent on the degree of hypotonia and early onset of epilepsy rather than the degree of craniofacial and limb malformations.
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PMID:Acrocallosal syndrome: association with cystic malformation of the brain and neurodevelopmental aspects. 149 47

A 6 month old Turkish boy with the acrocallosal syndrome is reported. The patient, born to consanguineous, healthy parents, presented with macrocephaly, a prominent forehead, hypertelorism, polydactyly of the fingers and toes, severe motor and mental retardation, hypotonia, and absence of the corpus callosum. The mode of inheritance is discussed and our case is compared with previously reported cases of the syndrome.
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PMID:The acrocallosal syndrome in a Turkish boy. 230 55

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.
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PMID:Acrocallosal syndrome: new findings. 272 49

Two unpublished cases with partial tandem duplication of 12p and one previously published case were studied by fluorescence in situ hybridization using 11 cosmid DNA probes from 12p. We propose that the smallest duplications of 12(p13.2pter) and 12(p13.1p13.33) produce the "trisomy 12p syndrome" which is characterized by heavy birth weight, macrocephaly, muscular hypotonia, short neck, flat face, high forehead, prominent cheeks, large philtrum, short nose with anteverted nostrils, and broad everted lower lip. From a review of the published cases we conclude that gross malformations are lacking in "pure" trisomy 12p, and mental retardation is severe in complete and moderate in partial trisomy 12p. Polydactyly and accessory nipples were found only with almost complete trisomy 12p. Abnormalities of hair growth may be related to a gene at 12p. The sub-band 12p11.21 may be critical for acrocallosal syndrome. Macrocephaly may be due to a metabolic disorder.
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PMID:Clinical and molecular cytogenetic observations in three cases of "trisomy 12p syndrome". 872 17

We report a case of acrocallosal syndrome in a 7-month-old female patient born to consanguineous parents, who presented with agenesis of the corpus callosum, polydactyly, and minor craniofacial dysmorphism. This case is similar to two other occurrences described in the literature, with no psychomotor development delay and hypotonia.
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PMID:[Acrocallosal syndrome without psychomotor abnormality: a case report]. 1920 65

Acrocallosal syndrome is an extremely rare genetic disorder with autosomal recessive inheritance. It is characterised by moderate to severe mental retardation, hypotonia, agenesis of the corpus callosum and preaxial polydactyly involving both feet and the facial features like broad forehead and hypertelorism. The authors report a case of a young hypertensive male who presented with unprovoked seizures for the first time who had multiple craniofacial, digital dysmorphic features with moderate mental retardation. The diagnosis of acrocallosal syndrome was arrived at after neuroimaging showed agenesis of corpus callosum with interhemispheric cysts.
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PMID:Acrocallosal syndrome in a young hypertensive male. 2269 5

The presentation of the typical characteristics of the acrocallosal syndrome (ACLS) are hypoplasia/agenesis of corpus callosum, moderate to severe mental retardation, characteristic craniofacial abnormalities, distinctive digital malformation, and growth retardation in a neonate. An Indian neonate presented on day 1 of life (youngest in the literature to be reported) with combination of abnormalities consistent with the acrocallosal syndrome and some additional findings. The baby, born to non-consanguineous, healthy parents, presented with macrocephaly, prominent forehead, hypertelorism, polydactyly of the hands and feet, duplication of hallux, hypotonia, recurrent cyanotic episodes, rib anomalies, dextro-positioning of heart, and delayed fall of umbilical cord. As the mode of inheritance of ACLS is autosomal recessive, the risk of recurrence is 25%. Genetic counselling is of prime importance, Polydactyly, and central nervous system malformations can be detected by ultrasonography in the second trimester, but due to variability of presentation, prenatal diagnosis may not always be possible.
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PMID:The acrocallosal syndrome in a neonate with further widening of phenotypic expression. 2494 54