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)

We report 5 new cases of the FG syndrome, 1 sporadic, 3 brothers from a European family, and another affected male born in the first FG syndrome family reported by Opitz and Kaveggia in 1974. The pedigree data confirm the hypothesis of X-linked inheritance of this multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome. Its manifestations include shortness of stature with a disproportionately large head, mental retardation, hypotonia with or without congenital joint contractures, seizures and a strikingly characteristic personality of facial appearance, imperforate anus and/or orthe gastrointestinal defects, congenital heart defects, and many minor manifestations. Chronic pulmonary disease in some affected males may be a complication of hypotonia.
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PMID:The FG syndrome: further characterization, report of a third family, and of a sporadic case. 56 38

Two patients with a virtually identical physical examination syndrome are reported. Both had severe microbrachycephaly, profound mental retardation and athetoid cerebral palsy. The anomalies include prominence of forehead, hypoplastic midface, mandibular prognathism, apparent midline "cleft" of mandible with absence of lower central incisors, ear and eye anomalies, growth failure, and various similar secondary anomalies due to hypotonia, cerebral palsy and immobilisation. The patients probably represent a "new" MCA/MR syndrome, the etiology of which is still unknown. A genetic cause, i.e., a gene mutation with pleiotropic effects, is suggested. This may involve an autosomal recessive trait, an autosomal dominant new mutation, or an X-linked dominant-hemizygous lethal trait.
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PMID:Studies of malformation syndromes of man XXXVIII: The BD syndrome. A "new" multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation syndrome with athetoid cerebral palsy. 117 93

A previously unreported X-linked MCA/MR syndrome is described in 4 members of a large family. Phenotypic manifestations include mental retardation, microcephaly, failure to thrive, severe congenital hypotonia, characteristic face, hypogenitalism, pachygyria. This appears to be an X-linked dominant trait with decreased penetrance and expressivity in carrier females.
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PMID:New XLMR syndrome with characteristic face, hypogenitalism, congenital hypotonia and pachygyria. 160 25

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.
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PMID:FG syndrome update 1988: note of 5 new patients and bibliography. 305 62

We reviewed 45 patients with a deletion of the long arm of chromosome 4. Forty-one were previous reports (25 terminal deletions and 16 interstitial deletions) and 4 are new cases with terminal deletions. Of the 29 patients with terminal deletions, 18 with deletion at 4q31 and 4 at 4q32----qter had an identifiable phenotype consisting of abnormal skull shape, hypertelorism, cleft palate, apparently low-set abnormal pinnae, short nose with abnormal bridge, virtually pathognomonic pointed fifth finger and nail, congenital heart and genitourinary defects, moderate-severe mental retardation, poor postnatal growth, and hypotonia. Six patients with a deletion at 4q33 and one patient with deletion 4q34 were less severely affected. In general, patients with various interstitial deletions proximal to 4q31 had a phenotype that was less specific, although mental retardation and minor craniofacial anomalies were also present. There were 3 patients with piebaldism and one with Rieger syndrome. We conclude that terminal deletion of chromosome 4q (4q31----qter) appears to produce a distinctive malformation (MCA/MR) syndrome in which the phenotype correlates with the amount of chromosome material missing and which differs from the more variable phenotype associated with interstitial deletions of 4q.
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PMID:Interstitial and terminal deletions of the long arm of chromosome 4: further delineation of phenotypes. 306 75

We describe in two brothers a previously apparently unreported multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome of high, prominent forehead, vertical groove on tip of nose, "cowlick," ear anomalies, acrorenal field defect (incipient unilateral triphalangism, broad halluces, with unilateral renal agenesis in one of the boys), megalencephaly associated with congenital hypotonia, severe mental retardation and highly abnormal EEG without seizures, intrauterine growth retardation and primordial shortness of stature in one brother. This is a Group III ("provisionally private") MCA/MR syndrome and presumed to be due to a Mendelian (either X-linked or autosomal recessive) mutation. We do not think these patients have the FG syndrome. The condition has been named the neurofaciodigitorenal (NFDR) syndrome.
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PMID:The neurofaciodigitorenal (NFDR) syndrome. 708 Dec 97

We report on clinical and cytogenetic data on 5 children and 2 adults with a de novo inverted duplication of the short arm of chromosome 8, and we give a review of 26 patients from the literature. The clinical picture in young children is characterized by minor facial anomalies, hypotonia, and severe developmental delay. In older patients the facial traits are less characteristic, spastic paraplegia develops, and severe orthopedic problems are frequent. Psychomotor retardation is always severe-to-profound. Duplication of 8p21-p22 results in a clinically recognizable multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome. It is shown that in all patients examined, the duplication was accompanied by a deletion of the most terminal part of 8p.
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PMID:Inversion duplication of the short arm of chromosome 8: clinical data on seven patients and review of the literature. 859 64

We present data on 4 mentally retarded brothers, 2 of whom were dizygotic twins with congenital hypotonia, constipation, head size disproportionately large for length or height, and a combination of minor anomalies suggestive of FG syndrome. These brothers have a mentally retarded full sister with similar minor anomalies and an older half-brother with the Martin-Bell syndrome. The mother is mentally retarded; 4 of 7 individuals are positive for fragile X, but all have a CGG expansion ranging from 0.2-2 to 4 kb. Although the phenotype is not completely typical of the FG syndrome and the coincidence of the FMR1 mutation and segregation of the MCA/MR phenotype are highly unlikely, the FMR1 mutation may affect morphogenesis more extensively and differently than the Martin-Bell syndrome does to effect an FG syndromelike phenotype in certain families. This phenotype does not appear to be a contiguous gene syndrome, but an effect of the FMR1 mutation on an adjacent gene must be considered.
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PMID:Fragile X mutation and FG syndrome-like phenotype. 884 90

We describe a patient who had craniofacial and genitourinary abnormalities, swallowing difficulties, esophageal dysfunction, hypotonia and moderate developmental delay, and who also had a terminal deletion of chromosome 13 (q32.3qter). This MCA pattern strongly suggests the Opitz GBBB syndrome. The deletion of chromosome 13 was interpreted as terminal with a breakpoint at 12q32.3. Coagulation factors VII and X located in 13q34, were markedly reduced in the propositus. Although there is some clinical overlap between patients with terminal deletion of 13q and those with the Opitz GBBB syndrome, our patient manifests a whole pattern of abnormalities characteristics of the latter disorder. The concurrence of the Opitz GBBB syndrome and the chromosome abnormality in our patient could be due to chance or, be because a gene for the Opitz GBBB syndrome is located at the tip of 13q.
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PMID:Distal deletion of chromosome 13 in a child with the "opitz" GBBB syndrome. 884 2

We report a patient with a syndrome of MR/MCA who was the product of a highly consanguineous family. The patient was the result of a union between a man and his daughter. The daughter was in turn the product of a mating between this same man and his mother. Major findings include: severe psychomotor and mental retardation, microcephaly with cerebral dysgenesis and cerebellar hypoplasia, early hypotonia and late hypertonia, short stature, early swallowing incoordination with aspiration pneumonias, distinctive face with striking hypertelorism, hypospadias, cryptorchidism, overlapping fingers, and rocker-bottom feet. Chromosome and metabolic studies were normal. The severity and uniqueness of his phenotype suggests a new, probably private, autosomal recessive disorder due to homozygosity for one or more loci.
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PMID:Provisionally unique autosomal recessive syndrome due to significant consanguinity. 1150 58


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