Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026986 (myelodysplastic syndrome)
14,926 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors present three children born with myelomeningocele and hydrocephalus. Each presented with symptoms/signs of ventriculoperitoneal shunt malfunction. All patients at the time of presentation exhibited significant urinary bladder infections and were appropriately treated for their infection. No patient was found to have an underlying shunt infection. All patients without medically threatening symptoms were carefully observed and noted to have resolution of their shunt dysfunction symptoms/signs following treatment of their urinary bladder infections and thus did not undergo a shunt operation. Based on the courses of these patients, we believe that significant urinary bladder infection in patients with myelodysplasia in whom a shunt has been placed may often be enough to bring a subclinical shunt malfunction to clinical attention or even to be the cause of temporary distal peritoneal shunt malabsorption. Although the exact mechanism for this dysfunction is unclear, treatment of the bladder infection may address the symptomatic shunt dysfunction in some patients so as to avoid operative intervention. We emphasize, however, that careful observation of these patients should be performed during hospitalization because they often rely on adequate cerebrospinal fluid diversion. Only patients with mild symptomatology should be observed first as the initial line of treatment.
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PMID:Transient ventriculoperitoneal shunt dysfunction in children with myelodysplasia and urinary bladder infection. Report of three cases. 1615 34

Myelodysplasia with attendant spinal dysraphic disorders can be and often is progressive. In addition to the neurologic deficit present since the prenatal period, hydrocephalus, Chiari malformations with hydromyelia, tethered cord syndrome, or combinations of one or all lead to changing functional ability and progressive deformities. With recent advances in neurologic monitoring and treatment, many of these deformities can be prevented from appearing or becoming destabilizing if the subtle signs are picked up and early intervention is provided. Advances in urologic surgery have also provided better control of continence in addition to reduced infections and renal destruction. This article reviews the monitoring and treatment considerations that have led to such a significant improvement in outcomes in patients who have myelodysplasia.
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PMID:Care of the adolescent with spina bifida. 1904 63

MIRAGE syndrome is a multisystem disorder characterized by myelodysplasia, infections, restriction of growth, adrenal hypoplasia, genital phenotypes, and enteropathy. Mutations in the sterile alpha motif domain containing 9 (SAMD9) gene which encodes a protein involved in growth factor signal transduction are thought to cause MIRAGE syndrome. SAMD9 mutations lead to an antiproliferative effect resulting in a multisystem growth restriction disorder. Though rare, a few patients with SAMD9 mutations were reported to have hydrocephalus and/or cerebellar hypoplasia on imaging. The neuropathologic features of MIRAGE syndrome have not been previously described. Here, we describe the postmortem neuropathologic examinations of 2 patients with a clinical diagnosis of MIRAGE syndrome and confirmed SAMD9 mutations. Common features included microcephaly, hydrocephalus, white matter abnormalities, and perivascular calcifications. One of the 2 cases showed marked cerebellar hypoplasia with loss of Purkinje and granule neurons as well as multifocal polymicrogyria and severe white matter volume loss; similar findings were not observed in the second patient. These cases demonstrate the variation in neuropathologic findings in patients with MIRAGE syndrome. Interestingly, the findings are similar to those reported in ataxia-pancytopenia syndrome caused by mutations in SAMD9L, a paralogue of SAMD9.
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PMID:The Neuropathology of MIRAGE Syndrome. 3210 87


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