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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Northwest Regional Screening Program to detect congenital hypothyroidism in infants born in Oregon, Montana, Alaska, and Idaho (combined birthrate of 69,000/ yr) was added to our ongoing screening program in 1975. The program utilizes dried blood filter paper specimens collected routinely in the first few days of life in all four states and again at about 6 weeks of age in Oregon only. The screening test consist of an initial thyroxine (T4) measurement; a thyroid-stimulating hormore (TSH) determination is performed on those specimens with T4 concentrations in the lowest 3% group. Serum samples obtained by venipuncture are requested for confirmation of the diagnosis. In the first two years of the program, 25 infants with primary hypothyroidism were detected amont 110,667 infants screened, a frequency of 1:4,430. Fourteen cases of thyroxine-binding globulin deficiency were also detected, a frequency of 1:7,900. Using the T4 followed by TSH testing approach, the frequency of request for repeat specimens was 0.4% in Oregon and 0.05% in the other states. The cost per specimen was $1.96. The majority of infants lacked clinical signs or symptoms of hypothyroidism; only one infant was clinically suspected of having hypothyroidism prior to detection. The most common neonatal symptoms were
constipation
, lethargy, and prolonged jaundice, while the most common physical signs were
hypotonia
, umbilical hernia, and large fontanels. Thyroid scans showed the most common etiology to be thyroid aplasia, followed by an ectopic gland, hypoplasia, and goiter. Serum T4 concentrations were lowest in those infants with aplasia, intermediate in infants with an ectopic gland or hypoplasia, and normal in the infant with the goiter. Neonatal hypothyroidism varies in degree and has several different causes; the capacity to secrete thyroid hormone, the duration before hypothyroidism becomes clinically manifest, and possibly the eventual prognosis for intellectual function depend on the nature of the underlying cause. While the mean age at treatment was 59 days, the goal of diagnosing congenital hypothyroidism and treating affected infants by 1 month of age seems realistic.
...
PMID:Neonatal hypothyroidism detected by the Northwest Regional Screening Program. 10 59
Clinical investigations of infants hospitalized with botulism demonstrate a remarkable uniformity of complaints and physical findings.
Constipation
precedes a course of progressive weakness and cranial nerve dysfunction. Examination reveals
hypotonia
, hyporeflexia, and a variable pattern of involvement of the motor cranial nerves. Initial laboratory investigations should include electrodiagnostic tests, because findings of an incremental response to rapid, repetitive nerve stimulation and of brief, small-amplitude motor units on electromyography are virtually pathognomonic of botulism in the infant. Differential diagnosis includes disorders that may produce generalized depression of the central nervous system, such as septicemia, meningitis, metabolic disturbances, and intoxications. Specific involvement of the neuromuscular system includes acute polyneuropathies, diseases of the anterior horn cell, congenital myopathies or muscular dystrophy, and neonatal myasthenia gravis. Recent studies have expanded the clinical spectrum of infant botulism to include some cases of sudden infant death syndrome and otherwise nonspecific
constipation
.
...
PMID:Differential diagnosis of infant botulism. 23 67
Infant botulism is a unique neuromuscular disease affecting infants less than six months old. It is the result of intraintestinal toxin production by C. botulinum (toxi-infection). Characteristic symptoms include
constipation
, lethargy, and decreased feeding. Physical examination often reveals generalized
hypotonia
with cranial nerve impairment. Recovery is dependent on supportive care in an intensive care setting. The relationship of this disease to the sudden infant death syndrome requires further study.
...
PMID:Infant botulism. 37 78
In this retrospective investigation, 1000 cases of congenital hypothyroidism followed-up in the Pediatric Endocrinology Unit at Hacettepe University Children's Hospital between 1964-1989 were evaluated with respect to age at diagnosis, main complaints, symptoms and physical findings. The mean age at diagnosis was 49.22 months, with 55.4 percent of patients diagnosed after two years of age and only 3.1 percent during the neonatal period. The main complaints of the patients were growth failure (26.7%), inability to speak (21.4%), and inability to walk (18.1%). The physical signs and symptoms most commonly detected by the physician were
hypotonia
(72%),
constipation
(66.8%), cretinoid face (64.6%), and macroglossia (64.6%). These results emphasize the necessity for routine neonatal screening programs to be established in Turkey, with the aim of detecting congenital hypothyroidism.
...
PMID:Congenital hypothyroidism in Turkey: a retrospective evaluation of 1000 cases. 130 38
Hypercalcaemia occurs in two forms: mild and severe. In the mild form, usually in young infants the characteristic signs of the severe from (Williams syndrome) are absent, and thus it may cause diagnostic difficulties. Because of that, in infants with muscular
hypotonia
, growth arrest,
constipation
and apathy the possibility of idiopathic hypercalcaemia, apart from rickets, should be considered.
...
PMID:[A case of idiopathic hypercalcemia (hypersensitivity to vitamin D 3]. 133 82
The authors describe a case of botulism in a 3-month-old infant infected with Clostridium botulinum type A. Symptomatology developed within four days, persisted for two weeks, then regressed. Symptoms were paresis of face muscles, hyporeactive pupils, loss of succion and deglutition, axial
hypotonia
, weakness of peripheral muscles, lability of the autonomic nervous system with acute episodes of bradycardia and
constipation
. Anomalies of the electroen-cephalogram and of the auditory evoked responses suggest that the toxin penetrated the central nervous system. Treatment was symptomatic, without need for assisted ventilation. It was not possible to detect the source of infection.
...
PMID:[Botulism in infancy]. 266 93
Four males with X linked mental retardation are described. Manifestations similar to those seen in the FG syndrome include severe
constipation
, tall, broad foreheads,
hypotonia
, and cowlicks of the hair line, but no individual patient had all the features of the syndrome and none had macrocephaly. The facial appearance was distinctive but different from that seen in the FG syndrome. The cases are presented in order to discuss the phenotypic limits of the FG syndrome and to consider the need to separate other distinct but similar entities.
...
PMID:X linked mental retardation: a family with a separate syndrome? 273 99
At the eve of its mapping, the pre-molecular picture of the FG syndrome is heavily biased towards the severe end of the phenotypic spectrum because present knowledge is largely based on propositi. It is an X-linked, incompletely recessive, complexly pleiotropic syndrome with considerably variable expressivity. Though a true multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome, severe malformations are uncommon and involve mostly the anus (60%) and non-colonic GI defects (33%), hypospadias (25%), cleft palate (6%), rarely a congenital heart defect. The complex CNS dysfunctions of congenital
hypotonia
and all of its sequelae, MR, and occasional seizures, must be attributed to a developmental CNS defect which is rarely demonstrated at pre-mortem, and which is known to involve agenesis of the corpus callosum in some 25% of appropriately studied patients (mostly propositi). Thus, the diagnosis is largely made on a specific constellation of minor anomalies and mild malformations in a hypotonic boy with severe
constipation
and a very characteristic facial appearance and behavioral phenotype. In about 1/3 of cases, carrier manifestations may be detected physically. New hemizygote manifestations seen in this review of 5 new patients include abnormal eruption of teeth, diastasis between upper central incisors, apparent gynecomastia, cleft lip, and nasolacrimal and helicine fistulae. Only a half hundred or so FG syndrome patients are known, but we suspect the syndrome is much more common than realized, and because of the unfortunate recurrence risk potential, deserves careful consideration in every appropriate case. RFLP mapping studies are urged in order to aid diagnosis of "mild" cases, and prenatal and carrier detection.
...
PMID:FG syndrome update 1988: note of 5 new patients and bibliography. 305 62
Congenital hypothyroidism is a relatively common endocrine disorder, affecting one in 4000 newborn infants. Undiagnosed and untreated congenital hypothyroidism will result in un-toward consequences, including mental retardation and other significant neurologic sequelae. For these reasons, programs to screen newborns were developed to detect congenital hypothyroidism before clinical features become obvious enough to suggest the diagnosis. The most common clinical features include prolonged jaundice, skin mottling,
hypotonia
, umbilical hernia,
constipation
, and macroglossia. Congenital hypothyroidism may be caused by several different disorders; ectopic thyroid glands represent the most common cause. There is accumulating evidence that autoimmune thyroid disease as manifested by TBII may be the cause of thyroid dysgenesis in some cases. The diagnosis is easily confirmed by finding a low serum free T4 or total T4 and elevated serum TSH concentration. The treatment of choice is levothyroxine; these infants must be followed carefully to ensure normal growth and development and maintenance of serum T4 and TSH within the normal ranges. With appropriate treatment and follow-up, the large majority of these infants have an excellent prognosis, with an IQ no different from comparison populations. However, it appears that there is still a small percentage of infants who are the most severely affected, who manifest the lowest serum T4 levels, thyroid aplasia, and retarded bone ages, and who may run the highest risk for some degree of retardation and other neurologic sequelae. Acquired hypothyroidism is also a relatively common disorder, occurring in one in 500 to one in 1000 school-age children. These children most commonly have a slowdown in growth, short stature, a goiter, and a drop in school performance. Other clinical features may be subtle or absent except in more severe or long-standing cases. The most common cause is chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis. The diagnosis is easily established by finding low serum-free T4 or total T4 and elevated serum TSH concentrations. Again, levothyroxine is the treatment of choice. With appropriate treatment and follow-up, all clinical features that develop after age 3 should be reversible and the prognosis should therefore be very good.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of hypothyroidism in children. 331 7
We present the first two known cases of infantile botulism in Oklahoma. The first case was due to type B toxin; the second was due to type A toxin. Both cases demonstrate most of the classic features of what now appears to be the most common form of botulism. Infantile botulism is an underrecognized but reversible cause of
hypotonia
. In most cases, the prognosis is excellent with institution of appropriate supportive care. The recognition of cranial nerve palsies or a history of
constipation
should raise the suspicion of infantile botulism. Aminoglycoside antibiotics and other agents that may precipitate or exacerbate neuromuscular blockade should be used with extreme caution in hypotonic infants until the cause of the
hypotonia
is clearly identified.
...
PMID:Infantile botulism. 335 70
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