Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0264733 (ventricular dilatation)
2,163 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Xeroderma pigmentosum associated with neurological abnormalities is a less familiar neurocutaneous disorder. In this report, 35 patients with group A xeroderma pigmentosum were assessed for neurological complications. Of these, 17 showed microcephaly and 24 mental retardation. Of 25 patients over 7 years of age, 22 had sensorineural deafness and 12 showed spinocerebellar signs such as nystagmus, dysarthria, tremor and ataxia, while none below 7 years of age had such neurological complications. Thirty-five EEG studies were performed on 29 patients, and 15 showed intermittent spindles of grouped theta waves with abnormal slow background activity and a poorly developed alpha rhythm, suggesting immature brain development or a regression from normal brain function in many areas including the diencephalon. Twenty-six patients were examined by cranial CT scan, of whom 20 showed abnormal CT findings such as ventricular dilatation, diffuse cortical atrophy, and marked thickening of the calvarial bones. The incidence of abnormal EEG and CT findings increased with advancing age in accordance with the development of neurological complications in the CNS, thus suggesting a chronic progressive degenerative disease.
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PMID:EEG and CT abnormalities in xeroderma pigmentosum. 281 76

Xeroderma pigmentosum is an unusual neurocutaneous disorder. Recent studies have classified patients with xeroderma pigmentosum into 10 groups by somatic cell hybridization methods. In this report we describe 32 patients with Group A xeroderma pigmentosum, including 1 patient with an atypical case, who were assessed for neurological complications. Of these patients, 17 had microcephaly, 13 short stature, and 21 mental retardation. In patients over 7 years of age, sensorineural deafness and spinocerebellar signs such as nystagmus, dysarthria, tremor, and ataxia were frequently observed; no patients below 7 years of age had such neurological complications. Electroencephalographic studies revealed abnormal slow and low voltage background activity. Two patients had focal abnormal discharges, one of whom developed versive seizures. Cranial computed tomographic scans revealed abnormalities, including ventricular dilatation, cerebral atrophy, cerebellar and brainstem atrophy, and cranial bone thickening. A patient with an atypical case of Group A xeroderma pigmentosum had less skin and neurological involvement, and higher levels of postultraviolet colony-forming ability and host cell reactivation than did a typical Group A case. It is possible that these less severe cytological findings are responsible for the less severe skin lesions and neurological complications noted clinically.
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PMID:Neurological manifestations in xeroderma pigmentosum. 374 Aug 15

A case of head injury is reported because it presented such an unusual symptom as sudden, bilateral complete deafness. An 11-year-old boy was involved in a traffic accident while riding on a bicycle. He was admitted immediately after the accident in semicomatose state. The pupils were isocoric and pupillary light reflex was normal. Conjugate deviation to the right was seen. Oculo-cephalic response was absent. X-rays of his skull showed two linear fractures in the occipital bone. CT scan of the head showed symmetrical ventricular dilatation which was suspected to be a sequela of asphyxia at his birth although there was no obvious finding of cerebral contusion. His mental and physical development had been uneventful. One week after admission, his consciousness improved to some extent and at that time right hemiparesis and right infranuclear facial palsy were revealed. One month after the accident, he became alert and able to eat and to read the books on the bed, and then bilateral deafness was noticed. Audiometry showed that hearing was lost completely to both high and low notes, and there was absence of bone conduction bilaterally. Auditory brainstem response test revealed no response from wave I through wave V bilaterally. Right hemiparesis and right infranuclear facial palsy completely subsided and his mental and intellectual state became normal. He was discharged ambulatorily in good condition except for bilateral complete deafness. Now he is leading a useful life and attending a prefectural deaf and mute school.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Bilateral complete deafness following head injury in a child]. 408 85

Waardenburg syndrome was diagnosed in a nine-month-old female infant with dystopia canthorum, broad nasal bridge, overdeveloped eyebrows, cutaneous hypopigmentation, and deafness. Seizures occurred, which makes this case unusual. CAT scan demonstrated wide subarachnoid spaces without ventricular dilatation.
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PMID:[Waardenburg's syndrome associated with a generalized epileptic seizure. Cerebral tomodensitometric study]. 629 66

Beta-mannosidosis, an inherited defect of glycoprotein catabolism associated with deficiency of tissue beta-mannosidase and accumulation of Man(beta 1-4)GlcNAc and Man(beta 1-4)GlcNAc(beta 1-4)GlcNAc, appeared in four of 13 offspring of a single pair of clinically normal, related Nubian goats. Neurological examinations revealed that all four affected goats were unable to rise or walk. All had facial dysmorphism, dome-shaped skulls, small palpebral fissures, carpal contractures, hyperextension of the pastern joints, proximal muscle atrophy, intermittent ocular oscillations resembling pendular nystagmus, marked intention tremor, and deafness. With intensive care, three affected kids were hand-reared and then killed at 1, 7, and 21 days of age. Macroscopically, there were paucity of myelin in the cerebral and cerebellar hemispheres and ventricular dilatation. Microscopically, the extent and distribution of cytoplasmic vacuolation, myelin paucity, axonal spheroids, and filamentous expansions were evaluated in the cerebrum, cerebellum, brainstem, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves of the four affected kids and two age-matched, clinically normal kids. Widespread cytoplasmic vacuolation correlated with the previously reported accumulation of oligosaccharides in the brain and kidney and the deficiency of tissue beta-mannosidase. beta-Mannosidosis, not yet identified in man or other species, is characterized by distinctive neonatal clinical, pathological and biochemical features which differentiate it from the alpha-mannosidosis and other inherited diseases of glycoprotein catabolism.
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PMID:Caprine beta-mannosidosis: clinical and pathological features. 684 66

Nine children with congenital rubella syndrome were examined with respect to the relation between clinical symptoms and the findings of computed tomography (CT, 9/9 cases) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI, 7/9 cases). All patients had deafness, and three had relatively severe sequelae in the central nervous system (CNS), such as mental retardation (MR), cerebral palsy (CP) or microcephaly. In four patients, dilatation of the lateral ventricles was found by CT; in four patients, low-density areas were noted in the periventricular white matter and/or the subcortical white matter; one patient showed a spotty calcified area in the lenticula. No abnormal findings were found by CT in other three patients. MRI in seven children demonstrated areas of prolonged T1 and T2 relaxation times in the white matter in all of them. In relation to clinical symptoms, five patients without dilatation of the lateral ventricles had no sequelae except deafness. On the other hand, in four patients with dilation of the lateral ventricles, three had MR, CP or microcephaly. This study showed that there was a close relation between the ventricular dilatation and sequelae with in CNS, whereas abnormal intensity areas in the white matter found by MRI were not related well to the sequelae of CNS.
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PMID:[Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging of the brain in congenital rubella syndrome]. 883 Dec 40

This study describes a series of 28 cases of neurosyphylis presenting atypical oligosymptomatic syndromes involving epileptic attack, chronic headache, peripheral facial paralysis, deafness, isolated optic atrophy, and cerebral ataxia. Diagnosis was based on positive results (VDRL-TPHA) of serological reactions in blood samples and analysis of cerebrospinal fluid showing pleocytosis (mean lymphocyte level, 69%) and elevated protein levels. Epilepsy and chronic headache were the most common clinical manifestations. Brain scan demonstrated low-grade ventricular dilatation associated with nonspecific cerebral atrophy in 8 cases and isolated cerebral atrophy in three. In the remaining 17 cases brain scans were normal.
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PMID:[Atypical neurosyphilis: 28 cases observed at the University Hospital Center of Conakry]. 1219 11

Congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection can lead to severe neurological sequelae and (progressive) sensorineural deafness. Neonatal imaging data is mainly based on cranial ultrasound (US) and computed tomography (CT). The additional value of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was assessed in congenital CMV infection. The eleven infants studied had a gestational age between 34 and 41 weeks and a birth weight between 1000 and 2780 grams. All but 2 of the infants presented with microcephaly and jaundice at birth. The diagnosis was confirmed postnatally in all infants by isolation of the virus or a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) from the urine. Cranial US was performed in all, MRI in 6 during the neonatal period and later in infancy in 2. Auditory brainstem evoked responses (ABR) were performed in all survivors. US showed periventricular calcifications and/or lenticulostriate vasculopathy associated with mild to moderate ventricular dilatation in 10 of the 11 children. Periventricular (pseudo) cysts were seen in 6 children, being occipital in 4, temporal in 3 and fronto-parietal in 1. The cerebellum appeared to be small in 4 children. MRI provided additional information in 6 of the 8 children. Polymicrogyria in the perisylvian region was seen in 4 children, hippocampal dysplasia in 3 and cerebellar hypoplasia in 4 children. Abnormal signal intensity in the white matter was seen in 4 infants. ABRs were abnormal in 7 of the 9 children. Four children died in the neonatal period, 4 developed severe neurological sequelae, associated with epilepsy and sensorineural deafness in 3. Three children were still too young to be tested, but 2 of these showed sensorineural deafness. MRI provided important additional information, especially with regard to associated polymicrogyria, hippocampal dysplasia, and cerebellar hypoplasia. Calcifications were better seen using US. A combination of US and neonatal MRI should be recommended instead of a CT which is still recommended in the literature.
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PMID:The spectrum of cranial ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities in congenital cytomegalovirus infection. 1512 10

This is a report of a 6 month-old boy with a partial trisomy 2p24-->pter and monosomy 18q22-->qter. This is the first case presenting this unbalanced translocation with phenotypic features. The patient had growth and developmental retardation, facial dysmorphism, cleft palate, congenital cardiopathy, hypospadias, evantration of diaphragm and deafness. Cranial MRI showed mild ventricular dilatation. Cytogenetic analysis of the patient and his parents revealed a karyotype 46,XY, der(18), t(2;18)(p24;q22)mat in the patient. Subtelomeric FISH analysis confirmed the cytogenetic findings. Phenotypic features were consistent with either partial trisomy 2p or deletion 18q.
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PMID:Partial trisomy 2p24-->pter and monosomy 18q22.1- qter resulting from parental translocation. 2403 88