Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0026827 (hypotonia)
5,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Peroxisomal disorders are genetic diseases in which an impairment in one or more peroxisomal function(s) causes clinical and multiple biochemical abnormalities. Early recognition of the major peroxisomal disorders in which functional peroxisomes are virtually absent, leading to a generalised impairment of peroxisomal functions, is of utmost importance, as this will enable the prenatal diagnosis of these severe diseases in future pregnancies. Unfortunately, clinical recognition of these disorders can be difficult because of the aspecific and varying phenotypic presentation. We analysed the clinical characteristics in 40 patients suspected of having a peroxisomal disorder to identify specific clinical criteria for diagnosis. From this study we conclude that the combined presence of at least three major clinical characteristics (present in greater than 75% of the affected patients, including psychomotor retardation, hypotonia, impaired hearing, low/broad nasal bridge, abnormal ERG, hepatomegaly) and one or more minor characteristics (present in 50%-75% of the patients, like large fontanelles, shallow orbital ridges, epicanthus, anteverted nostrils, retinitis pigmentosa) warrants biochemical investigation of peroxisomal functions. Further prospective investigations will have to be done to evaluate these criteria.
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PMID:Clinical recognition of patients affected by a peroxisomal disorder: a retrospective study in 40 patients. 137 65

We reported the first case of typical infantile-type neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis (INCL) in Japan. The patient was a 1-year-old girl presenting with rapidly progressive psychomotor deterioration and blindness. Muscular hypotonia, microcephaly and myoclonic jerks became marked with the progression of her disease. Diminution in amplitude of EEG, VEP and ERG was prominent in the initial stage, but ABR was normal. MRI showed progressive brain atrophy. Electron microscopic examination of the biopsied skin revealed granular matrix, the specific inclusion bodies, in the epithelial cell of sweet glands. Many sea-blue histiocytes were demonstrated in her bone marrow samples. INCL is a common progressive encephalopathy in the Scandinavian countries, but a typical case had not yet been fully reported in Japan. This prompted us to report our case. Future reports are need for the study of INCL in Japan.
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PMID:[The first case of infantile type neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis in Japan]. 141 75

Clinical features of a rare congenital myopathy, muscle-eye-brain (MEB) disease, are described in 19 patients. The pedigree data suggest an autosomal recessive inheritance. The patients presented with congenital hypotonia and muscle weakness. Serum CK was elevated, EMG was myopathic and muscle biopsy showed slight or moderate changes compatible with muscular dystrophy. Ophthalmological findings included severe visual failure and uncontrolled eye movements associated with severe myopia. The flash VEPs were exceptionally high, whereas non-corneal ERG was unrecordable. The EEG showed progressive abnormalities after the age of 6 months. Psychomotor development was slow during the first years of life, and mental retardation was severe. Most patients began to deteriorate around age 5 years. This change included spasticity and joint contractures. CT scans showed ventricular dilatations and abnormally low white matter density in several patients. Spasticity, high VEPs and ocular manifestations differentiate MEB from the Fukuyama type congenital muscular dystrophy.
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PMID:Muscle-eye-brain disease (MEB) 236 Jul 4

The region of chromosome 21 between genes CBR and ERG (CBR-ERG region), which spans 2.5 Mb on 21q22.2, has been defined by analysis of patients with partial trisomy 21. It contributes significantly to the pathogenesis of many characteristics of Down syndrome, including morphological features, hypotonia, and mental retardation. Cosmid contigs covering 80% of the region were constructed and EcoRI maps produced. These cosmids were used for exon trapping and cDNA selection from three cDNA libraries (fetal brain, fetal liver, and adult skeletal muscle). Isolated exons and cDNAs were mapped on the EcoRI map, organized into contigs, sequenced, and used as probes for Northern blot analysis of RNA from fetal and adult tissues. We identified 27 genuine or highly probable transcriptional units evenly distributed along the CBR-ERG region. Eight of the transcriptional units are known genes.
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PMID:Transcriptional map of the 2.5-Mb CBR-ERG region of chromosome 21 involved in Down syndrome. 950 11

Microcephaly with chorioretinopathy (OMIM 156590) is an autosomal dominant syndrome, characterized primarily by chorioretinal lesions and microcephaly. The phenotype is variable, and has been described in association with retinal dysplasia that can be stable or show progressive degeneration, retinal folds, lymphedema, and mental retardation. We describe two siblings with microcephaly, mental retardation, and variable retinal and choroidal abnormalities. Patient 1 has multiple atrophic and dysplastic-appearing lesions of the retina and choroid in each eye. An ERG at 5 months of age disclosed markedly subnormal scotopic and photopic responses with delayed flicker timing. Patient 2 has bilateral macular folds with vitreoretinopathy, serous retinal detachments, glaucoma, and cataracts OU. Both have mental retardation with hypotonia and severe microcephaly. Chorioretinopathy and retinal folds have been described independently in microcephaly with chorioretinopathy. The present sibs are the first in whom these features are observed while the parents are normal. Our findings support an expansion of the ocular phenotype and suggest the existence of germ line mosaicism.
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PMID:Microcephaly with chorioretinopathy in a brother-sister pair: evidence for germ line mosaicism and further delineation of the ocular phenotype. 1748 91