Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026838 (spasticity)
6,471 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This study was undertaken to evaluate the recurrence risks for sibs of patients with symmetrical spasticity (either quadriplegia or diplegia) in the absence of factors known to cause spastic cerebral palsy (e.g. pre-term birth, perinatal hypoxia). Among 669 children in the West Midlands with spastic cerebral palsy, 24 had symmetrical spasticity and normal birth histories. This group was clinically and genetically heterogenous. Among their 55 sibs, six had a spastic disorder similar to that in the index patient, and one further sib, who had died young, had been mentally retarded. Of particular interest were two families with an autosomal recessive condition of post-natal microcephaly, myoclonic epilepsy and spastic quadriplegia; and one family, and possibly a sporadic case of X-linked athetoid cerebral palsy. The recurrence risk in this series of approximately 1 in 9 suggests that about half the children with symmetrical spastic cerebral palsy and a normal birth history may have a recessive condition.
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PMID:Recurrence risks in families of children with symmetrical spasticity. 87 Mar 57

X-linked hydrocephalus-stenosis of the aqueduct of Sylvius sequence (H-SAS, MIM number 30007) is a rare genetic disorder characterized by hydrocephalus, macrocephaly, adducted thumbs, spasticity, agenesis of corpus callosum and mental retardation. We confirm here the localisation of the mutant gene on Xq (Xq 2.8) by linkage analysis in a 5-generation pedigree (maximum lod score of Z = 4.57 at theta = 0.04 with probe St14 at locus DXS52) and emphasise the phenotypic variability of the disease. Ventricular dilatation in affected males was either severe and diagnosed antenatally or moderate and consistent with a long survival with little or no macrocephaly. Since other X-linked syndromes of mental retardation with spasticity and flexion deformities of the thumbs have previously been shown to map to the Xq 2.8 region as well (e.g. MASA syndrome and spastic paraplegia), the present results raise the question of whether H-SAS syndrome, MASA syndrome and spastic paraplegia with mental retardation might represent different phenotypic expression of various mutations at the same locus.
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PMID:X-linked hydrocephalus: clinical heterogeneity at a single gene locus. 139 13

This report describes a new syndrome of dysgenesis of corpus callosum with other anomalies, presenting as microcephaly, mental retardation, spasticity, and unusual facial appearance in 2 Chinese brothers and their maternal cousins. To date, there has not been any case reported in the Chinese population of this syndrome. All 4 patients in this report present with the same unusual face. Hydrocephalus and/or interhemispheric cyst were found among them. This syndrome is transmitted as an X-linked trait. The nosology is reviewed and discussed.
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PMID:X-linked recessive inheritance of dysgenesis of corpus callosum in a Chinese family. 148 21

A Sephardi Jewish family is reported in which the two brothers had mental retardation, lower limb spasticity and bilateral clasped thumbs anomaly. This X-linked recessive disorder has only been reported twice. We believe this syndrome comprises a distinct entity among the X-linked mental retardation syndromes.
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PMID:X-linked mental retardation with bilateral clasped thumbs: report of another affected family. 142 31

We report on a 4 generation family of individuals with an X-linked form of mental retardation involving 9 affected males and 5 obligate carrier females. Key manifestations include severe mental retardation, early hypotonia with progression to spasticity and contractures, choreoathetosis, seizures, presence of a long, narrow face with coarse features, cystic enlargement of the fourth ventricle with cerebellar hypoplasia (Dandy-Walker malformation), and iron accumulation in the basal ganglia with neuroaxonal dystrophy similar to Hallervorden-Spatz disease. Of the 5 known heterozygotes, 3 are dull intellectually, and one of the 3 developed a "presenile dementia." At autopsy she had iron deposition and neuroaxonal dystrophy in the basal ganglia and atrophy of the cerebral cortex. Although the clinical findings among relatives are variable, we conclude that this is a distinct, previously unrecognized X-linked mental retardation syndrome.
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PMID:New X-linked mental retardation disorder with Dandy-Walker malformation, basal ganglia disease, and seizures. 201 58

We report an interstitial deletion in the short arm of the X chromosome in a 6-year-old boy with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, glycerol kinase deficiency, adrenal insufficiency, intermittent hypoglycemia, spasticity, psychomotor retardation, and growth delay. His mother also has this deletion in an X chromosome. From our findings, we propose that the human glycerol kinase locus and the human X-linked adrenal hypoplasia locus are in the Xp21 band.
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PMID:Duchenne muscular dystrophy, glycerol kinase deficiency, and adrenal insufficiency associated with Xp21 interstitial deletion. 300 18

Rett syndrome, named after Rett's first description in 1966, evolves typically in 3 stages: after normal early psychomotor development up to the age of 6-24 months, stagnation and regression occur over a few months resulting in severe dementia, loss of speech, of social response and of purposeful hand use. This is accompanied by particular stereotyped hand movements and usually also by deceleration of head growth. The further course is often stable for a prolonged period, or only slowly progressive. Common features are seizures, episodic hyperpnea, scoliosis, spasticity and vasomotor disturbances of lower limbs. Rett syndrome has been observed only in girls, all cases (with 2 exceptions) being sporadic. This is probably explained by a X-linked dominant new mutation lethal in males. The pathogenesis is still unknown: no consistent metabolic, morphologic or neuroradiologic abnormalities have been found. According to some epidemiologic investigations, Rett syndrome affects about 1:15,000 girls and is thus responsible for a considerable proportion of severely retarded girls. Within one year the authors have retrospectively diagnosed 15 cases, which is assumed to represent only about a third of patients in Switzerland.
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PMID:[Rett syndrome: a progressive neurological syndrome in girls]. 370 8

A family is described with familial myoclonic epilepsy associated with mitochondrial myopathy. The disorder follows a maternal inheritance pattern consistent with a mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutation. The large kindred permitted exclusion of autosomal dominant, recessive, and X-linked patterns of transmission. Several characteristics of the inheritance and variability of expression within the pedigree are consistent with recently acquired knowledge about the genetics of human mtDNA. The clinical spectrum of disease is compatible with a proportionality model of mutant and wild-type mtDNAs. Muscle biopsies of affected patients showed an increased number of abnormal muscle mitochondria. Serum levels of pyruvate or pyruvate and lactate were elevated. The most severely affected patient had constant myoclonic jerking, dementia, ataxia, spasticity, hearing loss, and hypoventilation. Cerebral dysfunction in patients with mild involvement was marked by prominent photic driving seen on electroencephalograms and high-amplitude visual and somatosensory evoked responses but no myoclonus, ataxia, or dementia. The individual clinical features of the disease worsen over time for all patients; however, mildly affected patients have not become moderately affected and moderately affected patients have not become severely affected.
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PMID:Maternally inherited mitochondrial myopathy and myoclonic epilepsy. 392 81

We report on 4 boys (3 in one family) who have a remarkably constant syndrome of childhood-onset choreoathetosis with later spasticity, postnatal microcephaly, growth and mental retardation, apparent external ophthalmoplegia and varying degrees of deafness. The pedigrees are consistent with X-linked inheritance. The syndrome is compared and contrasted with others comprising basal ganglion dysfunction in childhood. It is concluded that clinically and genetically the condition is unique.
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PMID:A new X-linked syndrome comprising progressive basal ganglion dysfunction, mental and growth retardation, external ophthalmoplegia, postnatal microcephaly and deafness. 653 52

The clinical, radiological, and neuropathological findings in early onset Cockayne syndrome are illustrated in identical twins and their brother. Their appearance of dwarfism with small head and prominent beaked nose strongly resembled that seen in the Seckel syndrome, but unlike patients with that syndrome they had a normal birth weight (for twins), thick cranial vaults, intracranial calcification, and a severe degree of mental retardation. The twins were deaf and blind, with optic atrophy and retinal pigmentation, while their brother had cataracts. Their hands and feet were large in proportion to their small trunk. They had cutaneous sensitivity to any slight exposure to ultraviolet light and severe neurologic problems with incoordination and spasticity. Radiologic findings included microcephaly, a thick cranial vault, a small pelvis, coxa valga, and "ivory epiphyses" in terminal phalanges of hands and feet. Pathologic findings included atrophy of white matter with widespread patchy demyelination, and massive siderocalcific deposits in the brain, particularly in the basal ganglia and cerebellum. While autosomal recessive inheritance is most likely, formally X-linked inheritance cannot be excluded.
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PMID:Identical male twins and brother with Cockayne syndrome. 689 Mar 11


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