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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 2 5/12-year-old Chinese boy was investigated for refractory
seizures
and psychomotor regression. His birth history was unremarkable. Generalized seizures occurred at 2 weeks of age with hypocalcemia. They recurred at 7 months of age and have become aggravated since. During hospitalization, in addition to hypocalcemia and hypomagnesemia, he was found to have
hypoparathyroidism
, cardiomyopathy, and brain atrophy. Excessive renal loss of magnesium, general intestinal malabsorption, or inadequate dietary intake of magnesium were excluded. He was successfully treated with oral supplements of 19-25 mmole/day of magnesium. Over a few months, he made a dramatic progress in development. His
hypoparathyroidism
and cardiomyopathy gradually resolved. However, intermittent
seizures
and psychomotor retardation persisted up to his present age of 6 3/12 years. At 4 months of age his younger sister also developed
seizures
and was found to have isolated hypomagnesemia. This was corrected by oral magnesium and followed by resolution of the
seizure
. She has developed normally up to her present age of 1 10/12 years. Both patients are currently maintained on oral magnesium oxide.
...
PMID:Familial primary hypomagnesemia complicated with brain atrophy and cardiomyopathy. 929 31
There have been various reports in the medical literature concerning children with syndromes of congenital
hypoparathyroidism
,
seizures
, dysmorphic features and mental retardation. We describe a patient with
hypoparathyroidism
, mental retardation, micrognathia, deep-set eyes and pes cavus in a 31-year-old man. This combination of abnormalities in an adult is unique.
...
PMID:A patient with hypoparathyroidism, dysmorphic features and mental retardation. 937 48
Activating mutations of the Ca(2+)-sensing receptor (CaR) gene cause autosomal dominant
hypoparathyroidism
. Functional expression studies have been reported for several mutations, but have produced conflicting results. Thus, the mechanism by which these mutations activate the receptor is unclear. We describe here a new family with autosomal dominant
hypoparathyroidism
. The mother and three daughters experienced muscle spasms and/or
seizures
from early childhood. They were treated with oral calcium and vitamin D analogs, and all four patients developed hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, and renal insufficiency. In this family, we identified a heterozygous missense mutation (F612S) involving the extracellular region of the CaR. The mutation cosegregated with disease. It was not present in 50 normal control individuals. We used site-directed mutagenesis to introduce this mutation into the CaR cDNA, and then expressed the mutant receptor in human embryonic kidney (HEK)-293 cells. In these cells, the accumulation of inositol phosphates was measured as a function of extracellular Ca2+ concentration. Compared with the wild-type receptor, the mutant receptor showed a left-shift in the concentration-response curve and an increase in the maximal response to high Ca2+ concentration. These effects did not appear to be mediated by changes in levels of receptor expression, as judged by ELISA, or by changes in receptor glycosylation, as judged by Western analysis. We conclude that this CaR mutation causes
hypoparathyroidism
by a dual increase in receptor sensitivity to extracellular Ca2+ and maximal signal transduction capacity.
...
PMID:A Ca(2+)-sensing receptor mutation causes hypoparathyroidism by increasing receptor sensitivity to Ca2+ and maximal signal transduction. 938 Apr 34
Activating mutations of the extracellular calcium (Ca2+e)-sensing receptor (CaR) gene, mostly in its extracellular domain, can cause both familial and sporadic
hypoparathyroidism
. We report a Japanese family with severe
hypoparathyroidism
with pretreatment serum calcium (Ca) levels of 4.9-5.9 mg/dL. The proband presented with a
seizure
at 6 days of age. Her older brother and mother, who had also experienced
seizures
and tetany, respectively, likewise had
hypoparathyroidism
. A heterozygous missense mutation substituting a cysteine for the phenylalanine normally present at codon 788 (F788C) was identified in the CaR's fifth transmembrane domain and was shown to cosegregate with the disease. The mutation was absent in DNA from 50 control subjects. Analysis of the functional properties of the mutant receptor was carried out in transiently transfected HEK293 cells loaded with fura-2 by assessing Ca2+e-evoked increases in the cytosolic calcium concentration (Ca2+i). There was a leftward shift in the concentration-response curve for the mutant receptor [EC50 (effective concentration of Ca2+e producing half of the maximal Ca2+i response, 2.7 +/- 0.1 vs. 4.1 +/- 0.1 mmol/L for the wild-type receptor]. HEK293 cells cotransfected with both the wild-type and mutant CaRs (to mimic the heterozygous state in affected family members) showed an EC50 (3.0 +/- 0.1 mmol/L) similar to that of the mutant CaR alone. Thus, we confirm that 1) a gain of function mutation in the fifth transmembrane domain of the CaR causes severe familial
hypoparathyroidism
by rendering the receptor more sensitive than normal to activation by Ca2+e; 2) some patients in the family do not experience
seizures
despite their severe hypocalcemia; and 3) this condition needs to be differentiated from other causes of
hypoparathyroidism
.
...
PMID:Familial hypoparathyroidism: identification of a novel gain of function mutation in transmembrane domain 5 of the calcium-sensing receptor. 966 34
A six-month-old, intact female Himalayan kitten was presented to the University of Tennessee Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital for evaluation of chronic lethargy, inappetance, muscle tremors, and
seizures
. Upon physical examination, the kitten was very small for her age. Bilateral, incipient-to-immature cataracts were seen on ophthalmic examination. Severe hypocalcemia and concurrent hyperphosphatemia were identified on initial diagnostic evaluation. A diagnosis of primary
hypoparathyroidism
was made by identifying reduced concentrations of parathyroid hormone (PTH). The kitten responded well to treatment with calcium, vitamin D, and aluminum hydroxide and is clinically normal 17 months after initiation of treatment.
...
PMID:Hypocalcemia and hyperphosphatemia due to primary hypoparathyroidism in a six-month-old kitten. 982 87
We describe 2 unrelated Bedouin girls who met the criteria for the diagnosis of Kenny-Caffey syndrome. The girls had some unusual features--microcephaly and psychomotor retardation--that distinguish the Kenny-Caffey syndrome profile in Arab children from the classical Kenny-Caffey syndrome phenotype characterized by macrocephaly and normal intelligence. The 2 girls did not harbor the 22q11 microdeletion (the hallmark of the DiGeorge cluster of diseases) that we previously reported in another Bedouin family with the Kenny-Caffey syndrome (Sabry et al. J Med Genet 1998: 35(1): 31-36). This indicates considerable genetic heterogeneity for this syndrome. We also review previously reported 44 Arab/Bedouin patients with the same profile of
hypoparathyroidism
, short stature,
seizures
, mental retardation and microcephaly. Our results suggest that these patients represent an Arab variant of Kenny-Caffey syndrome with characteristic microcephaly and psychomotor retardation. We suggest that all patients with Kenny-Caffey syndrome should be investigated for the 22q11 microdeletion. Other possible genetic causes for the Kenny-Caffey syndrome or its Arab variant include chromosome 10p abnormalities.
...
PMID:Kenny-Caffey syndrome: an Arab variant? 1006 31
The Sanjad-Sakati syndrome (SSS; MIM241410), an autosomal recessive trait characterized by congenital
hypoparathyroidism
, growth and mental retardation,
seizures
, and a characteristic physiognomy, was recently linked to chromosome area 1q42-q43. SSS resembles the autosomal recessive form of Kenny-Caffey syndrome (KCS; MIM244460), with similar manifestations but lacking osteosclerosis. Since KCS was recently linked to the region 1q42-q43, the possibility that this disorder is allelic with SSS was considered. Eight Sanjad-Sakati families from Saudi Arabia were genotyped with polymorphic short tandem repeat markers from the SSS/KCS critical region. A maximum multipoint LOD score of 14.32 was obtained at marker D1S2649, confirming linkage of SSS to the same region as autosomal recessive KCS. Haplotype analysis refined the critical region to 2.6 cM and identified a rare haplotype present in all the SSS disease alleles, indicative of a common founder. In addition to the assignment of the Saudi SSS and Kuwaiti KCS syndromes to overlapping genetic intervals, comparison of the haplotypes unexpectedly demonstrated that the diseases shared an identical haplotype. This finding, combined with the clinical similarity between the two syndromes, suggests that the two conditions are not only allelic but are also caused by the same ancestral mutation.
...
PMID:Sanjad-Sakati and autosomal recessive Kenny-Caffey syndromes are allelic: evidence for an ancestral founder mutation and locus refinement. 1037 12
Though hypocalcemic symptoms from
hypoparathyroidism
following thyroidectomy most often occur in the immediate postoperative period,
hypoparathyroidism
can present itself many years after the thyroid surgery with nonspecific symptoms. We present herein the case of a 74-year-old woman with previously undiagnosed
hypoparathyroidism
who had tonic-clonic
seizures
and intracranial calcification 61 years after her thyroidectomy. This case is unusual because of the long latency between thyroidectomy and clinical presentation.
...
PMID:Hypoparathyroidism, intracranial calcification, and seizures 61 years after thyroid surgery. 1047 6
We report a novel mutation of the signal peptide of the prepro-PTH gene associated with autosomal recessive familial isolated
hypoparathyroidism
. The proposita presented with neonatal hypocalcemic
seizures
. Serum calcium was 1.5 mmol/L (normal, 2.0-2.5); phosphate was 3.6 mmol/L (normal, 0.9-1.5). She was born to consanguineous parents. A few years later, 2 younger sisters and her niece presented with neonatal hypocalcemic
seizures
. Their intact PTH levels were undetectable during severe hypocalcemia. Genomic DNA from the proposita was sequenced all exons of the prepro-PTH gene. A replacement of thymine with a cytosine was found in the first nucleotide of position 23 in the 25-amino acid signal peptide. This results in the replacement of the normal Ser (TCG) with a Pro (CCG). Genotyping of family members was carried out by identification of a new MspI site created by the mutation. Only affected family members were homozygous for the mutant allele, whereas the parents were heterozygous, supporting autosomal recessive inheritance. As this mutation is at the -3 position in the signal peptide of the prepro-PTH gene, we hypothesized that the prepro-PTH mutant might not be cleaved by signal peptidase at the normal position, and it might be degraded in rough endoplasmic reticulum.
...
PMID:A novel mutation of the signal peptide of the preproparathyroid hormone gene associated with autosomal recessive familial isolated hypoparathyroidism. 1052 31
Normal fetal and neonatal calcium homeostasis is dependent upon an adequate supply of calcium from maternal sources. Both maternal hypercalcemia and hypocalcemia can cause metabolic bone disease or disorders of calcium homeostasis in neonates. Maternal hypercalcemia can suppress fetal parathyroid function and cause neonatal hypocalcemia. Conversely, maternal hypocalcemia can stimulate fetal parathyroid tissue causing bone demineralization. We report two asymptomatic women, one with previously unrecognized
hypoparathyroidism
and the other with unrecognized familial benign hypercalcemia, who were diagnosed when their newborn infants presented with abnormalities of calcium metabolism. J.B. was born at 34 weeks' gestation with transient hyperbilirubinemia and thrombocytopenia. At 1 month of age he had severe bone demineralization, cortical irregularities, widening and cupping of the metaphyses, and lucent bands in the scapulae. The total serum calcium and phosphorus were normal with an ionized calcium of 5.4 mg/dL (4.6-5.4). His alkaline phosphatase, parathyroid hormone, and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D levels were all increased. P.B., mother of J.B., had no symptoms of hypocalcemia either prior to, or during this pregnancy. She had severe hypocalcemia and hyperphosphatemia, laboratory values typical of
hypoparathyroidism
. J.N. presented at 6 weeks of age with new onset of
seizures
and tetany secondary to severe hypocalcemia. The serum phosphorus, creatinine, alkaline phosphatase, and parathyroid hormone levels were normal. At 15 weeks of age his calcium was slightly elevated with a low fractional excretion of calcium. P.N., mother of J.N., had no symptoms of hypercalcemia either prior to, or during this pregnancy. Her serum calcium was 12.7 mg/dL and urine calcium was 66.5 mg/24 hr, with a low fractional excretion of calcium ranging from 0.0064 to 0.0073. P.N. has a brother who previously had parathyroid surgery. Both J.N. and P.N. meet the diagnostic criteria for familial benign hypercalcemia. These cases illustrate the important relationships between maternal serum calcium levels and neonatal calcium homeostasis. They emphasize the need to assess maternal calcium levels when infants are born with abnormal serum calcium levels or metabolic bone disease.
...
PMID:Disorders of maternal calcium metabolism implicated by abnormal calcium metabolism in the neonate. 1087 87
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