Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0086543 (cataract)
29,165 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An unusual combination of congenital malformations in a 16-year-old emotionally disturbed man is described. The anomalies included severe congenital bilateral leg lymphedema, bilateral gynecomastia, unilateral cataract, and malformed external genitalia. Genetic and hormonal investigations were unremarkable. Multiple concomitant operations (vascular and plastic surgeons) to correct the deformities and restore physical well-being and self-esteem were undertaken.
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PMID:Combined surgical correction of bilateral congenital lower limb lymphedema with associated anomalies. 966 70

Separation of chromatids of all mitotic chromosomes, here called total premature chromatid separation (total PCS), was observed in 67 to 87.5% of repeated cultures of peripheral blood lymphocytes from two unrelated infants. Also noted was a variety of mosaic aneuploidies, especially trisomies, double trisomies, and monosomies, to be called mosaic variegated aneuploidy. The infants both showed severe pre- and postnatal growth retardation, profound developmental retardation, uncontrollable seizures, severe microcephaly, hypoplasia of the brain, Dandy-Walker anomaly, abnormal facial appearance, and bilateral cataract. Patient 1, a girl, in addition had a cleft palate, multiple renal cysts, and Wilms tumor of the left kidney. Whereas patient 2, a boy, had ambiguous external genitalia. They both died within 2 years of age. In the two families of the infants, their parents and three other members showed 2.5 to 47% lymphocytes with total PCS but without mosaic variegated aneuploidy or phenotypic abnormalities. Another 10 relatives studied showed 0 to 1% cells with total PCS and so were judged negative for the total PCS trait. It was deduced that the total PCS trait in the two families was transmitted in an autosomal-dominant fashion, and the two affected infants were homozygous for the trait.
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PMID:Mosaic variegated aneuploidy with multiple congenital abnormalities: homozygosity for total premature chromatid separation trait. 967 59

A 49-year-old man was first seen in our department for the evaluation of scleroderma-like skin changes and a nonhealing ulcer on his leg from years before referral. His medical history was of long duration. His growth was stunted at the age of 12. At 21 years of age, the patient noted graying of the scalp hair, most prominent on his temples, and the process was progressively completed by the age of 23. At the same age, atrophy and thinning of the skin and loss of subcutaneous fat resulted in a tense, shining, and adherent appearance of his skin, most obvious on his face and extremities. Soon after, he developed a high-pitched, hoarse voice. He had undergone bilateral cataract surgery at the age of 30. Around the age of 46, he developed a unilateral nonhealing chronic leg ulcer (Figure 1). He had separated from his wife because of infertility. He was the first offspring of his second-degree healthy relative parents. The other 3 siblings had similar signs and symptoms. Our patient gave the history of premature graying of the hair of his younger brother at the age of 18 and his 2 younger sisters at the age of 12 and 16. His brother had recently received diagnoses of bilateral cataract and diabetes mellitus. All of the siblings had ceased growth from early adolescence. On physical examination, our patient's weight was 48 kg and his height was 150 cm. He had normal intelligence. He was speaking with a high-pitched and childish voice. He had a bird-like appearance with a beak-shaped nose. Mottled and diffuse pigmentation and poikiloderma appearance was conspicuous on his neck (Figure 2). The entire skin was smooth, shiny, and scleroderma-like, and a marked decrease in the subcutaneous fat was noted over the extremities. A deep cutaneous ulcer was evident on his slimmed leg. Digital ulcers were not found, and radial and dorsalis pedis pulses were palpable. Clinodactyly of the toes were conspicuous. His nails were dystrophic and he had used dentures from the age of 20. On examination of the external genitalia, his testes were smaller than normal. In the biopsy taken from the leg ulcer, there were no signs of malignancy. There were no signs ofosteomyelitis on x-ray. Biopsy of the normal skin revealed atrophic epidermis and thick dermis with hyalinization of the collagen fibers and absence of pilosebaceous structures (Figure 3). The patient's scalp hair was thin and sparse and there were few axillary and pubic hairs. His fasting plasma glucose level was normal.
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PMID:Werner syndrome in an Iranian family. 2113 29