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)

A male, born on December 8, 1956, during the period when many Minamata diseases broke out in a district. His parents who ate much fish and shell fish taken in Minamata Bay suffered from the light, incomplete Minamata disease showing sensory disturbance, the constriction of the visual field, muscular weakness, etc. He weighed 3,225 gr. upon the normal birth given 10 months after pregnancy. His abnormalities were noted since his head was not stabilized on the neck even six months after the birth. Because of the delay in the development of the motor function, he became barely able to sit, stand up and begin walking at the ages of 3, 5 and 6 respectively. In 1962 (at the age of 6), his congenital Minamata disease was diagnosed in view of his clinical symptoms and epidemiological conditions. The mercury value in the hair and blood upon the birth is not known because a considerable time had elapsed after the birth when his mercury poisoning was discovered. However, the clinical symptoms included intelligence disturbance, character change, dysarthria, primitive reflexes, strabismus, hypersalivation, ataxia and hyperkinesia, indicating a typical congenital Minamata disease. Until he became 13 years old (1969) or so, his mental and motor function developed, both gradually. In the same year, he was admitted to a special class for the handicapped. EEG examination revealed that there was a slow alpha activity in the basic pattern and that 6 Hz positive spike was found in the sleep EEG. The constriction of the visual field was classified through examination.2+
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PMID:[Congenital Minamata disease accompanied by arachnoid cyst (author's transl)]. 709 64

Thirty patients with strabismus were seen face to face by an ophthalmologist and an orthoptist. The patients were then presented by the same orthoptist to a second ophthalmologist via a telemedicine link. Twenty-six patients were seen using a bandwidth of 384 kbit/s and four using 128 kbit/s. There was agreement between the two ophthalmologists about diagnosis and management in 24 cases, partial agreement in one and no agreement in five (17%). Manifest strabismus was safely diagnosed and managed using telemedicine at 128 kbit/s, although 384 kbit/s was preferred because it obviated the need for repeated examination. Latent strabismus and micro-movements were difficult to diagnose using telemedicine even at 384 kbit/s. Young patients who are unable to sit still would not be suitable for strabismus assessment via telemedicine.
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PMID:The role of telemedicine in the assessment of strabismus. 1180 86

Congenital muscular dystrophy type 1C (MDC1C) is caused by the homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations of the FKRP gene. This article reported the clinical and mutation features of a child with MDC1C. The boy aged 8 months visited the hospital due to delayed development. As for clinical manifestations, the boy could not turn over or sit stably by himself, and there was a significant reduction in muscle tension; biceps reflex in both upper extremities and patellar tendon reflex and Achilles tendon reflex in both lower extremities could not be induced. The boy also had a stereotyped facial expression and strabismus. Gene detection revealed c.350C>G and c.1303C>T compound heterozygous mutations in the FKRP gene. The c.350C>G mutation came from the mother and had been reported as a pathogenic missense mutation. The c.1303C>T mutation came from the father and was a new missense mutation, and a bioinformatics analysis showed that it might be a pathogenic mutation. The boy was diagnosed with MDC1C with reference to the clinical features of hypotonia and motor developmental delay and FKRP gene mutation sequencing.
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PMID:[Clinical features and FKRP mutations of congenital muscular dystrophy 1C]. 3021 31