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)

Three Down syndrome patients for whom karyotypic analysis showed a "mirror" (reverse tandem) duplication of chromosome 21 were studied by phenotypic, cytogenetic, and molecular methods. On high-resolution R-banding analysis performed in two cases, the size of the fusion 21q22.3 band was apparently less than twice the size of the normal 21q22.3, suggesting a partial deletion of distal 21q. The evaluation of eight chromosome 21 single-copy sequences of the 21q22 region--namely, SOD1, D21S15, D21S42, CRYA1, PFKL, CD18, COL6A1, and S100B--by a slot blot method showed in all three cases a partial deletion of 21q22.3 and partial monosomy. The translocation breakpoints were different in each patient, and in two cases the rearranged chromosome was found to be asymmetrical. The molecular definition of the monosomy 21 in each patient was, respectively, COL6A1-S100B, CD18-S100B, and PFKL-S100B. DNA polymorphism analysis indicated in all cases a homozygosity of the duplicated material. The duplicated region was maternal in two patients and paternal in one patient. These data suggest that the reverse tandem chromosomes did not result from a telomeric fusion between chromosomes 21 but from a translocation between sister chromatids. The phenotypes of these patients did not differ significantly from that of individuals with full trisomy 21, except in one case with large ears with an unfolded helix. The fact that monosomy of distal 21q22.3 in these patients resulted in a phenotype very similar to Down syndrome suggests that the duplication of the genes located in this part of chromosome 21 is not necessary for the pathogenesis of the Down syndrome features observed in these patients, including most of the facial and hand features, muscular hypotonia, cardiopathy of the Fallot tetralogy type, and part of the mental retardation.
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PMID:No significant effect of monosomy for distal 21q22.3 on the Down syndrome phenotype in "mirror" duplications of chromosome 21. 146 8

An unbalanced translocation of a portion of the long arm of chromosome 21 to the short arm of chromosome 4 resulted in a partial deletion of chromosome 21 (pter----q21.05) and in the loss of the telomere of 4p. The phenotype of the child included asymmetrical facies, microcephaly, short stature, hypotonia, and psychomotor retardation associated with frequent infections. Normal SOD-1 activity in red blood cells and fibroblasts and normal cystathionine beta synthase activity in fibroblasts suggest that these gene loci are distal to 21q21.05.
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PMID:Partial deletion 21: case report with biochemical studies and review. 343 May 48

An example of subacute necrotizing encephalopathy, the fifth case in Thailand, was recorded. A 7-month-old boy presented clinically with vomiting, lethargy, respiratory difficulty, deteriorated consciousness, and hypotonia. The CT brain scan disclosed bilateral symmetrical radiolucencies in the basal ganglia, especially the lentiform nuclei, and thalami. Postmortem examination of these areas as well as the periaqueductal region revealed subacute necrotizing encephalopathy. It was characterized by necrosis, gliosis, and status spongiosus of the neuropil with relatively preserved neurons, and hyperplasia of small blood vessels as well as endothelium. As far as we are aware, the vast majority of abnormalities in the basal ganglia visualized by CT brain imaging often show calcific foci or high attenuation with asymmetrical distribution. Bilateral symmetrical lesions of low density are rare. We reported such an abnormality in a postmortem proven case of Leigh's disease. To recognize this finding should lead to correct antemortem diagnosis of the latter.
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PMID:Subacute necrotizing encephalopathy (Leigh's disease) in a child with particular reference to CT finding. 775 78

To evaluate the topographical neurological distribution, patterns of abnormal tone and related functional neuromotor impairment after grade 3 and grade 4 intraventricular/periventricular haemorrhage (IPVH), 33 children with previous grade 3 or 4 IPVH of mean gestational age 30.9 weeks (range 25-40 weeks) and mean birth weight 1743 g (range 866-3600 g) were examined neurologically at 4.7 years (range 0.75-10.8 years). Neurological signs were absent in 10/33 cases which were equally distributed between the grade 3 and grade 4 IPVH groups. The largest single topographical neurological distribution was hemiparesis in 8/23, followed jointly by diplegia (cerebral paraplegia) in 6/23 and triplegia in 6/23 cases and finally quadriplegia in 3/23 cases. Grade 4 IPVH tended to result in asymmetrical syndromes, accounting for 7/8 cases of hemiparesis and 5/6 cases of triplegia, whereas all 3/3 cases of quadriplegia followed grade 3 IPVH. The 6/23 cases of diplegia were shared between the grade 3 and grade 4 IPVH groups. Tone was normal in 7/8 of the hemiparetic subjects. Dystonia was the commonest tone abnormality, affecting 8/23 children with neurological disturbance, followed by ataxia/hypotonia in 4/23 and mixed dystonia/hypotonia in 3/23. Only 1/23 cases had signs of spasticity. Spasticity is rare following severe IPVH. Diplegic children had a better functional neuromotor grade than hemiparetic children, who in turn did better than triplegic children. Ataxia hypotonia resulted in better functional outcome than dystronia, which in turn was more favourable than mixed tone patterns. Cranial imaging by ultrasound (US) or computed tomographic (CT) scanning proved an unreliable prognostic indicator except in the case of hemiparesis, for which US scans correctly predicted the affected side in 5/7 cases. The neurological syndromes following severe IPVH differ from the classical encephalopathy of prematurity, and this should lead to a re-appraisal of the trends in the prevalence of cerebral palsy. Caution should be exercised in the interpretation of cranial imaging with regard to pessimistic prognoses in the presence of changes or undue optimism in their absence.
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PMID:Heterogeneity of neurological syndromes in survivors of grade 3 and 4 periventricular haemorrhage. 840 2

The locomotion of rats with a right hemicerebellectomy (HCb) performed in adulthood was compared by means of kinematic analysis with the locomotion of rats with a similar lesion performed on the first postnatal day. The age at which the animals received cerebellar lesion made a significant difference with respect to the locomotor strategies utilized in adulthood. During stance, neonatal operate rats showed a clear hyperextension of both hindlimbs but not of the forelimbs. Their locomotor posture was characterized by spinal flexion with the head held lower than normal. During swing, they showed a tendency towards 'high stepping'. Their steps were regular and symmetrical but hypometric. Adult lesioned animals displayed a marked extensor hypotonia, ipsilateral to the lesion during stance and a relevant hyperflexion affecting both sides, during swing. Alteration of the interlimb coordination and modified sequence of steps were also observed. Thus, a highly asymmetrical, impaired and unstable locomotion was displayed by this group of animals. The present findings demonstrate the importance of the age-at-lesion factor in determining the motor strategies in the recovery of locomotor function after HCb in the rat. This evidence is discussed in the light of the widespread anatomical remodelling already demonstrated following neonatal, but not adult, HCb in rats.
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PMID:Hemicerebellectomy and motor behaviour in rats. III. Kinematics of recovered spontaneous locomotion after lesions at different developmental stages. 850 11

A Japanese girl developed tonic spasms in series at two months after birth. When she was admitted at 4 months, she had generalized muscle hypotonia and could not control her head. She had atotal agenesis of the corpus callosum on MRI, reticulo-lacunitis revealed by ophthalmologic examination, and hypsarrhythmia in EEG. Brain stem auditory evoked potentials and flash-visual evoked potentials exhibited abnormally asymmetrical findings. The cortical components of somatosensory evoked potentials were not elicited on admission, but some components became to be recognized on median nerve stimulation in accordance with improvement of EEG findings after various therapeutic trials. We concluded that these neurophysiological examinations were useful to investigate the abnormal lesions of the central nervous system in patients with Aicardi syndrome.
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PMID:[A case of Aicardi syndrome: neurophysiological investigation]. 875 31

We show the complications observed in a large series of children with hypomelanosis of Ito (HI) or incontinentia pigmenti achromians, studied in a neurology service over 30 years. Of the 76 patients, 35 were male (46%) and 41 female (54%) with ages ranging from newborn to 10 years at the time of the first visit. They were thoroughly studied from the clinical, genetic, psychological, neuroradiological, with computed tomography (CT) and/or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and electroencephalographic (EEG) points of view. Mental retardation was observed in 43 cases (57%) of whom eight (10%) showed autistic behavior; 16 (21%) were borderline and only 17 (22%) had a normal mental level (IQ > 85). Thirty-seven patients (49%) had seizures, consisting of infantile spasms in six cases (8%). Twelve cases showed macrocephaly and coarse facies, six had microcephaly, and 14 showed hypotonia with pes valgus and genu valgus. Three cases of cerebellar hypoplasia, another of intracranial arteriovenous malformation and another of distal spinal muscular atrophy were observed as well. Some other anomalies, such as syndactyly, clinodactyly, abnormalities of the skeleton, asymmetry of the facies, ears, body and/or extremities, gynecomastia and asymmetrical breasts, short stature, oral alterations, congenital cardiopathies and genital anomalies, were also occasionally found. Three children died, but necropsy was performed only in one. Anatomical and histological studies did not disclose specific findings.
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PMID:Hypomelanosis of ITO. A study of 76 infantile cases. 953 59

One hundred and fifty-three infants were assessed by a method specific to preterm infants and appropriate to the intensive-care nursery environment. The presence or absence of six atypical features (coarse jitters, dominant asymmetrical tonic neck reflex, paucity of movement, 'contradictory' development, hypotonia, or hypertonia) resulted in neonatal classification. There were 116 'usual' (an absence of atypical features with progressive development), 26 'unusual' (a transient occurrence of any atypical feature), and 11 'suspect' (dominance of one or more atypical features). At 6 years of age the motor subsystems of balance, coordination, fine and gross motor, and associated movements were assessed. Nine of 11 children with cerebral palsy had neonatal categories of 'suspect' (7) and 'unusual' (2), of the remaining four other 'suspect' children, two failed two motor subsystems and two failed motor items. A 'usual' neonatal assessment predicted normal motor outcome for 72 of 116 (62%) whereas a 'suspect' assessment predicted major motor dysfunction for seven of 11 of the children.
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PMID:Assessment of preterm infants in the intensive-care unit to predict cerebral palsy and motor outcome at 6 years. 963 Feb 58

The rapidly expanding use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in children with neurological impairments of unknown aetiology has revealed a large number of children with abnormalities of the cerebral white matter, some with leukodystrophy-like white matter abnormalities on MRI, but non-progressive in clinical presentation and course. The aim of this study was to investigate the clinical and neuroradiological characteristics of 26 children with white matter abnormalities of unknown origin and to find diagnostic clues or indicators of progressive versus nonprogressive disease. The typical child with white matter abnormalities was characterized by onset of symptoms within the first year of life, most often presenting as general developmental delay and hypotonia. Later-appearing signs were spasticity and ataxia and as a rule severe learning and motor disabilities. Serious ophthalmological signs were frequently seen. Perinatal adverse events were rare, infectious aetiologies not indicated but prenatal stigmata relatively common. The clinical course was progressive in 11 children and non-progressive in 15. Late onset presentation was associated with a progressive course whereas prenatal stigmata and asymmetrical white matter lesions only were found in children with a non-progressive disorder. The MRI showed three main patterns: a) a generalized increase of the T2 signal of the white matter in 12 children, b) a bilateral, symmetric but not generalized abnormality in nine and c) asymmetric, focal or multifocal pathology in five. Useful information as to clinical entities and course was obtained from the combined clinical and radiological assessment. A precise nosological diagnosis could be made in six cases. The study showed that white matter abnormalities in children constitute a heterogeneous group of rare and 'anonymous' conditions, motivating collaborative studies for further clarification of background and management.
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PMID:Clinical characteristics of children with cerebral white matter abnormalities. 1070 Nov

There is currently little evidence available concerning the risks of foetal exposure to new anti-epileptic drugs such as lamotrigine, vigabatrin, gabapentine, topiramate. A small number of malformations without organ specificity have been described and are not easy to interpret because of the existence of concomitant treatments. We have reported a series of 12 pregnancies with exposure to recent anti-epilepticdrugs and that were reported to the Post-marketing Surveillance office in Tours, France. Five concerned Lamictal of which 2 related to monotherapy, one concerned Epitomax used in monotherapy and there were 6 cases of polytherapy including Sabril. Associated drug therapies were Depakine, Tegretol, Rivotril and Urbanyl. Six of the patients were on folic acid supplements. The average age of the women was 26.5 years. In each case, treatment had been initiated before conception and was continued for at least 3 months. Of the 12 babies born, only one presented with a malformation (aplasia of the muscle of the left lower lip and asymmetrical abduction of the hips) following exposure to Lamictal and Depakine. Four infants, two of whom were premature, showed signs of neonatal stress: transient respiratory distress and difficulty in taking feeding-bottles following exposure throughout the pregnancy to Epitomax; suction disorders, hypotonia and vomiting were observed after exposure to Sabril, Tegretol and Rivotril throughout the pregnancy; respiratory distress and apnoea--bradycardia were observed after exposure throughout the pregnancy to Lamictal and Urbanyl; respiratory distress and thrombocytopaenia were observed after exposure throughout the pregnancy to Lamictal". This small series confirms that the current data concerning the teratogenicity of new anti-epileptic drugs are as yet insufficient to exclude any teratogenic risk. Consequently, strict adherence to current recommendations relating to drug use during pregnancy is essential. The treatment of all patients wishing to become pregnant should be discussed.
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PMID:[New antiepileptic drugs in pregnancy: outcome of 12 exposed pregnancies]. 1242 60


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