Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038379 (strabismus)
9,317 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Increased amounts of free sialic acid were found in cultured fibroblasts and urine of a 4-year-7-month-old Italian boy with mental retardation, hypotonia, failure to thrive, coarse facial features, convergent strabismus, pale skin and fair hair. Ultramicroscopic examination of conjunctival and skin tissues showed a number of membrane-bound vacuoles containing low-density granular material in the cytoplasm of the fibroblasts. The clinical, biochemical and ultrastructural findings are similar to those described in Salla disease. Neuraminidase activity is normal. The molecular basis of the sialic acid storage disease is not known. Evidence for defective transport of sialic acid across the lysosomal membrane has been demonstrated in the patient's fibroblasts. It is possible that this might represent the metabolic abnormality.
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PMID:Free sialic acid storage disease. A new Italian case. 356 61

A 16-year-old boy with Prader-Labhart-Willi syndrome (PLWS) had hypotonia, feeding difficulties, failure to thrive, strabismus and bilateral inguinal hernias with cryptorchidism during infancy followed by hyperphagia, marked early-onset obesity with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum, short stature, hypogonadotropic hypogonadism and some of the facial characteristics of the individuals with the PLWS. IQ is estimated around 90. Cytogenetic studies showed mosaicism: 45,X, t(Y;15) with partial deletion 15 (15pter----15q12); 46,X, t(Y;15), dic (15)(15pter----15q12::15q12----15pter) and 47, X, t(Y;15), dic(15), dic(15). The dic(15) was bisatellited, NOR-positive on both arms and represented inv dup(15). Thus, the 2 lines with the dic(15) showed partial trisomy 15 (15pter----15q12) and partial pentasomy 15 (15pter----15q12), respectively. The cell line ratios were different in lymphocyte and fibroblast cultures. The unique cytogenetic findings in this patient, the reports of a variety of chromosome 15 aberrations in PLWS, as well as aberrations of other chromosomes, suggest that the condition is a contiguous gene syndrome rather than an aneuploidy syndrome.
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PMID:Unique mosaicism in Prader-Labhart-Willi syndrome--a contiguous gene or aneuploidy syndrome? 368 18

Two infants presented with acquired infantile nystagmus. On examination, they manifested peculiar facies, growth and developmental delay, failure to thrive, and a Wernicke's type of nystagmus. Suspicion of a B vitamin deficiency resulted in correct diagnosis of dietary deficiency and/or enzymatic defect. In both instances, dietary treatment with B vitamins resulted in resolution of the nystagmus and improved growth and development of both individuals. Physicians, especially pediatricians and ophthalmologists, should be alert to the possibility of a Wernicke's type nystagmus in such infants, since the diagnosis may be critical to accurate diagnosis and treatment.
J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus
PMID:Nutritional nystagmus in infants. 392 66

The auditory brainstem response (ABR) was studied in an infant with Gaucher's disease. The infant was normal until the age of three months. His illness began with stridor, strabismus, inguinal hernia and failure to thrive. Thereafter, muscular rigidity with opisthotonus, ocular palsies, difficulty in swallowing and respiratory failure due to central origin developed. He died of respiratory failure due to central origin developed. He died of respiratory failure at the age of one year and four months. The ABR was abnormal at six and eight months of age. Initially, at the age of six months, there was a lengthening of the peak latencies of wave I, II and III and disappearance of the waves after IV. But at eight months, more marked lengthening of the peak latencies of the waves and the disappearance of waves after III were noted as his general condition deteriorated. The autopsy revealed relative preservation of the nuclei and tracts of the auditory pathways in the brainstem. The ABR was useful for monitoring the progress of the disease in this patient because it made detection of brainstem lesions possible.
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PMID:Auditory brainstem response (ABR) in infantile Gaucher's disease. 715 5

Peroxisomal bifunctional enzyme complex deficiency is a recently recognized abnormality of fatty acid metabolism. We herein present the association of a flecked retina with peroxisomal bifunctional enzyme deficiency, a clinical association not previously reported. We suggest the finding of a flecked retina in an infant presenting with hypotonia, seizures, and failure to thrive is highly suggestive of this diagnosis.
J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus
PMID:Peroxisomal bifunctional enzyme complex deficiency with associated retinal findings. 762 69

Carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome type 1 (CDGS-1) is an autosomal recessive hereditary metabolic disorder, the gene locus of which is chromosome 16p13. The disorder is characterised by genetic heterogeneity, and by decrease in the gene product, phosphomannomutase 2, though the heterogeneity is far less manifest in affected Swedish families. Its incidence is 1/80,000 live births, and the under-5 mortality rate over 30 per cent. The causes of death are liver failure, cardiac tamponade, haemorrhaging, and severe infection. The characteristic biochemical aberration is the occurrence of deficient carbohydrate chains in many but not all circulating glycoproteins, and the serum and blood concentrations of some glycoproteins may be above or below normal. These changes may improve over time, but never normalise. The clinical picture is generally more problematic during the first years of life when psychomotor retardation is complicated by failure to thrive, liver dysfunction, pericardial effusions, and stroke-like episodes. In addition, strabismus, lipocutaneous anomalies, and gluteal fat pads are always present, and muscular hypotonia and restricted joint mobility are common. Failure to thrive is common, with vomiting and diarrhoea and subsequent slow growth. Inflammation is a constant finding in the liver, and very common in the small bowel. Pancreatic function is also affected. Pericardial effusion has been reported in 50 per cent of the youngest children, requiring pericardectomy in 30 per cent of cases. Haemorrhaging and thromboembolic complications may occur, and the serum concentrations of several factors and inhibitors are low, particularly those of factors V and XI, protein C and antithrombin. Stroke-like episodes occur in about 30 per cent of cases, often following an infection, with coma lasting for hours to several days. Such sequelae as hemiplegia, blindness, and other focal neurological pathology have been observed transiently. Diagnosis is based on the serum carbohydrate-deficient transferrin level, verified by isoelectric focusing. Molecular genetic procedures enable point mutations to be identified and prenatal diagnosis to be performed in many families.
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PMID:[CDGS-1--a recently discovered hereditary metabolic disease. Multiple organ manifestations, incidence 1/80,000, difficult to treat]. 988 93

Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) are a group of metabolic disorders with multisystemic involvement characterized by abnormalities in the synthesis of N-linked oligosaccharides. The most common form, CDG-Ia, resulting from mutations in the gene encoding the enzyme phosphomannomutase (PMM2), manifests with severe abnormalities in psychomotor development, dysmorphic features and visceral involvement. While this disorder is panethnic, we present the first cases of CDG-Ia identified in an African American family with two affected sisters. The proband had failure to thrive in infancy, hypotonia, ataxia, cerebellar hypoplasia and developmental delay. On examination, she also exhibited strabismus, inverted nipples and an atypical perineal fat distribution, all features characteristic of CDG-Ia. Direct sequencing demonstrated that the patient had a unique genotype, T237M/c.565-571 delAGAGAT insGTGGATTTCC. The novel deletion-insertion mutation, which was confirmed by subcloning and sequencing of each allele, introduces a stop codon 11 amino acids downstream from the site of the deletion. The presence of this deletion-insertion mutation at cDNA position 565 suggests that this site in the PMM2 gene may be a hotspot for chromosomal breakage.
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PMID:A deletion-insertion mutation in the phosphomannomutase 2 gene in an African American patient with congenital disorders of glycosylation-Ia. 1189 94

The congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) are a rapidly expanding group of metabolic syndromes with a wide symptomatology and severity. They all stem from deficient N-glycosylation of proteins. To date the group contains 18 different subtypes: 12 of Type I (disrupted synthesis of the lipid-linked oligosaccharide precursor) and 6 of Type II (malfunctioning trimming/processing of the protein-bound oligosaccharide). Main features of CDG involve psychomotor retardation; ataxia; seizures; retinopathy; liver fibrosis; coagulopathies; failure to thrive; dysmorphic features, including inverted nipples and subcutaneous fat pads; and strabismus. No treatment currently is available for the vast majority of these syndromes (CDG-Ib and CDG-IIc are exceptions), even though attempts to synthesize drugs for the most common subtype, CDG-Ia, have been made. In this review we will discuss the individual syndromes, with focus on their neuronal involvement, available and possible treatments, and future directions.
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PMID:The congenital disorders of glycosylation: a multifaceted group of syndromes. 1655 63

Gaucher's disease is caused by a lack of glucocerebrosidase, and in type 2 various neurological symptoms can occur;however, the detailed pathogenesis of the condition remains undetermined. Here we performed neurophysiological examinations in an 18-month-old girl with Gaucher's disease type 2 to specify the brainstem lesions. Developmental delay occurred from the age of 8 months, and the patient subsequently showed strabismus, loss of head control, failure to thrive and irregular respiration. She was admitted to our hospital at the age of 18 months. A definite diagnosis of Gaucher's disease type 2 was made from the presence of Gaucher cells and reduced glucocerebrosidase activity. Clinically, limited ocular movements, poor facial expression and bulbar palsy indicated disturbances in the nuclei of oculomotor, trochlear, abducent, facial and ambiguous nerves, although magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) failed to visualize any structural changes in the brain including the brainstem. Neurophysiologically, auditory brainstem response and somatosensory evoked potential demonstrated lesions in the cochlear nucleus and medial lemniscus, respectively. On polysomnography, disturbed sleep parameters during rapid eye movement sleep, in addition to the lack of modification of respiratory patterns by sleep stage, suggested dysfunctions in the locus ceruleus, raphe nuclei and pontine reticular formations. It is likely that these neurophysiological tests can be useful to identify functional lesions that are not detectable by MRI, and should help exploit new treatments for child-onset neurodegenerative disorders such as Gaucher's disease.
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PMID:[Neurophysiolgical analysis in an 18-month-old girl with Gaucher's disease type 2]. 1685 93

Autosomal recessive osteopetrosis is a severe hereditary bone disease whose cellular basis is in the osteoclast, but with heterogeneous molecular defects. We hereby report the clinical and the molecular study of seven patients affected by the recessive form of osteopetrosis (ARO) from six families originating from the Middle-East: four from Lebanon and two from Syria. Parental consanguinity was found in five families. The mean age of diagnosis was 3 months. Failure to thrive, prominent forehead, exophthalmia, optic atrophy, hepatosplenomegaly, neurological manifestations, anaemia, thrombocytopenia, hypocalcaemia, elevated hepatic enzymes and acid phosphatase, and an early fatal outcome were common. Macrocephaly, strabismus, and brain malformations were relatively less common. Mutations were identified in two genes: TCIRG1 and OSTM1. Phenotype-genotype correlation is discussed.
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PMID:Molecular study of six families originating from the Middle-East and presenting with autosomal recessive osteopetrosis. 1740 May 32


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