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)

This paper describes the second patient found to be affected with a deficiency of transaldolase (TALDO1; EC 2.2.1.2). Clinically, this patient presented in the neonatal period with several signs of severe liver failure: severe coagulopathy, low serum protein, elevated blood ammonia, and hypoglycaemia. She had generalized oedema, moderate muscular hypotonia, and dysmorphic signs. Liver size was decreased, and the spleen was moderately enlarged. There was severe cardiomegaly. The clinical course was characterized by intractable liver failure and progressive myocardial hypertrophy. The child died at the age of 18 days from respiratory failure. In urine, elevations of erythritol, arabitol and ribitol were found, suggesting a deficiency of transaldolase. Enzyme studies in cultured fibroblasts showed undetectable transaldolase activity. DNA sequence analysis of the TALDO1 gene showed a homozygous missense mutation (575G>A), resulting in an amino acid alteration at position 192 (arginine to histidine, R192H). This amino acid is part of the catalytic site of the transaldolase protein. Discovery of this second patient affected with transaldolase deficiency and liver failure suggests that this disorder has a heterogeneous clinical presentation with highly variable severity.
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PMID:A newborn with severe liver failure, cardiomyopathy and transaldolase deficiency. 1587 6

We describe a child with classical Menkes disease with a novel ATP7A mutation, intractable seizures, severe hypotonia and developmental delay, hypopigmentation of the skin and hair, and failure to thrive, who was treated with daily subcutaneous copper histidine injections for 2(1/2) years, beginning at 15 months of age. He became seizure-free and pigmentation of his skin and hair darkened, but he continued to have severe developmental delays. His condition remains stable 8 months after stopping treatment. We review the ethical aspects of offering copper treatment for Menkes disease infants diagnosed after neurological symptoms become manifest. These include (1) the prospect for any benefits, (2) the potential risks and discomforts, (3) the parents' wishes with respect to treatment, (4) the family's understanding of the treatment's potential futility, (5) the family's understanding of the investigational nature of this treatment, (6) the potential for treatment to have an adverse impact on unaffected family members, (7) whether the ultimate decision regarding treatment should rest with health care providers or with the patient's parents, and (8) the duration of treatment. The ethical issues encountered in providing possibly futile treatment in this difficult disorder seem relevant to other pediatric medical conditions as well.
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PMID:Copper-replacement treatment for symptomatic Menkes disease: ethical considerations. 1609 18

A 5.4-year-old male propositus is reported with mild dysmorphic features including hypoplasia of the radial part of both hands affecting thenar, thumb and fingers 2-3, incomplete syndactyly of fingers 3-4, single palmar creases, brachymesophalangia of toes 3-5, dissociated retardation of bone age, telecanthus, spina bifida occulta, cryptorchidism, muscular hypotonia, and borderline mental retardation. His karyotype was unbalanced, 46,XY,der(16)ins(4;16)(q26q28.1; q12.1q12.2)pat. In the propositus' father who had brachydactyly of fingers 2-5 and brachymesophalangia of toes 3-5 the insertion was reciprocal, 46,XY,rep ins(4;16)(q26q28.1;q12.1q12.2). Insertions are rare, reciprocal insertions most unusual. The characterization of the insertion in the propositus and the detection of its reciprocity in the father were achieved by the application of spectral karyotyping (SKY). Further examination of the propositus' unbalanced genome by array-CGH analysis delimited the chromosomal locations of the deletion/insertion rearrangement on a 0.5-2 Mb resolution level and allowed to design specific BAC FISH analyses that pinpointed the borders of the affected segments. The rearrangement involved a segment of 7.7 Mb between RP11-1030 g22 and RP11-52k8 at the chromosomal regions 4q26 and 4q28.1, respectively, and a segment of 2.8 Mb between RP11-242n20 at 16q12.1 and RP11-324d17 at 16q12.2. A simple molecular genetic explanation of the phenotype cannot be given. A relation to the Townes Brocks gene (SALL1) located 340 kb proximal of the 16q12 deletion/insertion is unlikely. Possibly more relevant is an overlap of the 16q12 deletion/insertion with a small deletion of the syntenic chromosomal region in the mouse that causes a developmental disorder of digits ("Fused toes").
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PMID:Small reciprocal insertion detected by spectral karyotyping (SKY) and delimited by array-CGH analysis. 1617 28

We describe a clinical profile of a male with Rett syndrome who presented initially with significant axial and peripheral hypotonia, head and truncal titubation and global delay. He is non-ambulatory, lost the few words he had learned and gradually developed hand stereotypes, breathing difficulties, seizures, scoliosis and has osteoporosis sleep problems and sludging in his gall bladder. Prior to diagnosis he underwent comprehensive neurological, metabolic and genetic investigations. After his older sister was diagnosed with atypical Rett syndrome; MECP2 mutation studies on him revealed a pathogenic mutation. His mother is a Rett carrier with a skewed inactivation of chromosome X. Clinical signs and symptoms required to meet the criteria for diagnosis of Rett syndrome have gradually evolved over time. This case demonstrates an unusual family history for Rett syndrome and alerts readers to the utility of screening males for Rett syndrome.
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PMID:Clinical profile of a male with Rett syndrome. 1618 90

Vitamin B12 deficiency can cause serious developmental regression, hypotonia and cerebral atrophy in infants. We report a 6-month-old infant, with insidious developmental regression and brain atrophy showed by CT scan, secondarily to vitamin B12 deficiency. His mother was a strict vegetarian and the patient was exclusively breastfed. The clinical symptoms and the brain CT were normalized after vitamin B12 administration.
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PMID:Vitamin B12 deficiency in infancy as a cause of developmental regression. 1631 May 94

A 1-year-old boy with weight loss, decreased activity, and psychomotor regression is presented. He was subjected to an extremely detailed evaluation, including electroencephalography (EEG) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), until a simple hemogram in our center revealed that he had macrocytic anemia with megaloblastic changes in the bone marrow. His history revealed that he had been exclusively breast-fed by his vegetarian mother. Further investigations showed low serum vitamin B12 concentration, methylmalonic aciduria, and homocysteinemia, indicating that the macrocytic anemia was due to vitamin B12 deficiency. This boy represents a case of macrocytic anemia and hypotonia owing to vitamin B12 deficiency that developed because of exclusive breast-feeding by a vegetarian mother.
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PMID:Answer to hypotonia: a simple hemogram. 1641 68

Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS) type VI is an autosomal recessive disorder of the connective tissue characterized by joint hypermobility, muscle hypotonia, scoliosis, and ocular fragility. In this case report, an EDS type VI patient with a skeletal and dental Class III malocclusion is presented and the clinical approach to his orthodontic problem is emphasized. A 17-year-old male patient presenting some major and minor symptoms of the syndrome was referred to our orthodontic department for diagnosis and treatment. The typical clinical signs confirmed the diagnosis of EDS type VI. He was a skeletal and dental Class III malocclusion patient (both mandibular protrusion and maxillary retrusion) with a noncontributory family history. He had severe crowding in the lower and upper dental arches with retruded incisors. His first treatment plan included orthognathic surgery, but because of the risks of bleeding and poor healing, we elected to treat the patient without surgery.
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PMID:Orthodontic treatment protocol of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type VI. 1644 89

A 10-year-old African-American male has been followed since 2 years of age due to his mental retardation, severe behavioral problems, and dysmorphism. Conventional cytogenetic analysis, chromosome painting, high-resolution comparative genomic hybridization (HR-CGH), and bacterial artificial chromosome fluorescent in situ hybridization (BAC FISH) revealed an apparent duplication in the short arm of a chromosome 11, dup(11)(p14.3p15.1), seen also in his mentally retarded mother. The proband had moderate to severe mental retardation, a history of IUGR, infantile hypotonia, FTT, exotropia, inguinal hernia repair, and several dysmorphic features. His mother had mild mental retardation, a history of impulsivity, assaultive outbursts, and similar dysmorphism. Although G-banding and FISH indicated a duplication, HR-CGH confined the localization of material to bands 11p14-11p15 and aided the selection of locus-specific BAC clones to more precisely characterize the duplicated region. To our knowledge, the results represent the first example of a familial, cytogenetically visible duplication of euchromatin in 11p that excludes the Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome critical region. It is possible that one or more genes had been disrupted at the breakpoints of the above structural chromosomal rearrangement giving rise to the present phenotype.
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PMID:Duplication of 11p14.3-p15.1 in a mentally retarded proband and his mother detected by G-banding and confirmed by high-resolution CGH and BAC FISH. 1651 86

Fumaric aciduria is a rare, autosomal recessive disorder caused by deficient activity of fumarate hydratase (FH). Common clinical features are hypotonia, failure to thrive, severe psychomotor retardation and seizures. Facial dysmorphism and brain malformations are frequent. Recently, some FH gene mutations have been associated with inherited cutaneous and uterine leiomyomas and papillary renal cell cancer. Our patient had a relatively mild phenotype, a previously not reported genotype and familial tumour predisposition. The mother and grandmother had uterine myomas. The paternal grandfather and his two brothers died from lung and laryngeal cancers. The pregnancy was complicated by bleeding and intrauterine growth retardation. Delivery was after 35 weeks, with normal Apgar score. The girl was hypotonic since birth. At age 2 months the parents noticed short apnoeic crises. She could sit at age 1.5 years, and walk with assistance at 4 years. At age 8 years highly increased excretion of fumaric acid was found twice (217 and 445 mmol/mol creatinine). Shortly before that the girl started to have leg and arm spasms. Grand mal seizures occurred twice. Facial dysmorphism included depressed nasal bridge, anteverted ears, hypertelorism and microcephaly. Speech was limited to few disyllables. She was atactic with spastic paraparesis. Brain MRI showed slight ventriculomegaly, white-matter atrophy and hypoplasia of corpus callosum. Activity of FH in fibroblasts was 1.9 nmol/min/mg protein (controls 40-80). Analysis of the FH gene revealed the maternally derived c.1029_1031delAGT mutation, resulting in Val deletion and substitution of Gln by His, and paternally derived c.976C > T mutation, resulting in substitution of Pro by Ser.
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PMID:Fumaric aciduria: mild phenotype in a 8-year-old girl with novel mutations. 1697 75

We report a case of partial biotinidase deficiency (plasma biotinidase levels: 1.30 nm/minute/mL) in a 7-month-old boy who presented with evidence of perinatal distress followed by developmental delay, hypotonia, seizures, and infantile spasms without alopecia or dermatitis. His neurologic symptoms improved markedly on biotin supplementation and antiepileptic drug therapy. DNA mutational analysis revealed that the patient was homozygous for a novel E64K mutation and his parents were heterozygous for the same mutation. Whereas preexisting perinatal distress probably contributed to the severity of the patient's symptoms, the described mutation is novel and is possibly responsible for at least some of his clinical manifestations.
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PMID:Novel mutation causing partial biotinidase deficiency in a Syrian boy with infantile spasms and retardation. 1709 67


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