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)

Lowe oculocerebrorenal syndrome (OCRL) (MIM 309000) is a rare X-linked multisystem disorder characterized by congenital cataracts, muscular hypotonia, areflexia, mental retardation, maladaptive behavior, renal tubular dysfunction, vitamin-D-resistant rickets, and scoliosis. The underlying gene OCRL1 is located on chromosome Xq25-q26 and contains 24 exons. It encodes a 105-kDa phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PtdIns[4,5]P(2)) 5-phosphatase that is localized to the Golgi complex. To confirm the clinical diagnosis and to assess the carrier state of female relatives for genetic counseling we examined 6 independent patients and their families (a total of 23 individuals) using an improved mutation screening strategy for the OCRL1 gene by sequencing of large PCR amplicons. Four novel and two known mutations were identified: three premature terminations caused by either frameshift mutations (1899insT in exon 17 and 2104-2105delGT in exon 18) or a nonsense mutation (1399C > T in exon 12), two missense mutations (1676G > A and 1754C > T in exon 15), and a 6-bp deletion (1609-1614delAAGTAT in exon 14). An ophthalmological examination was performed in all patients and 14 female relatives. All genotypically proven carrier females showed characteristic lenticular opacities, while all proven noncarriers were lacking this phenotypic finding. The results confirm that ophthalmological evaluation is an apparently reliable first-line method to ascertain the carrier state in Lowe oculocerebrorenal syndrome. The high expressivity of lenticular symptoms in OCRL1 gene carriers is consistent with the hypothesis that (PtdIns[4,5]P(2)) 5-phosphatase activity has low functional reserve capacity for maintaining a balanced homeostasis of lenticular metabolism.
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PMID:Carrier assessment in families with lowe oculocerebrorenal syndrome: novel mutations in the OCRL1 gene and correlation of direct DNA diagnosis with ocular examination. 1076 76

To describe the efficacy of intravitreal chemotherapy (IViC) preceded by intra-arterial chemotherapy (IAC) for the treatment of advanced stage retinoblastoma. This non-comparative interventional case series retrospectively reviewed the medical records of six patients who presented within months of each other with unilateral retinoblastoma, Reese-Ellsworth stage Vb/D of ABC classification in the affected eye. After clinical and ophthalmoscopic evaluation, they underwent MRI to exclude local and CNS dissemination. The IAC was given to treat retinal masses and intravitreal injections to treat vitreous seeding. Patients had received two cycles (six infusions) of IAC, and from six up to ten melphalan injections into the vitreous, with an interval of 7-10 days between them. From one to four intravitreal injections were performed for partial remission or consolidation. No permanent complications of procedures have been reported. All patients underwent to bimonthly MRI examination, during treatment and every 3 months for 1 year after last injection, to exclude orbital dissemination. Successful control (100 %) of tumor masses and vitreous seeds was achieved in all cases at 12 months follow-up. Complications were posterior lens opacity, acute ischemic papillitis, partial CVR thrombosis, hypotonia (case 1), partial vitreous hemorrhage (case 4). No complications appeared in cases 2, 3, 5, and 6. No intraocular or orbital tumor recurrence or retinoblastoma metastases (follow-up range, 12-33 months) were observed. Sequential IAC and intravitreal melphalan for advanced retinoblastoma allowed to provide retinal and vitreous seed control.
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PMID:Alternated intra-arterial and intravitreal chemotherapy for advanced intraocular retinoblastoma: preliminary successful results without systemic chemotherapy. 2641 40