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

Blood pressure, which ist the product of cardiac output and peripheral vascular resistance is regulated by a complex feedback mechanism involving the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems and hormones. An acute disturbance of regulation may lead to a life-threatening increase in blood pressure. Diagnosis is based upon a careful measurement of blood pressure, which must be performed under internationally standardized conditions. Hypertensive crisis refers to a rapid blood pressure increase greater than 30 mmHg above the age-related 95th percentile. The main causes of hypertension in childhood are renal diseases, which may be aggravated by additional conditions either by the clinician himself (e.g. cyclosporin, steroids) or by the patient (lack of compliance). Crisis affects the brain (hypertensive encephalopathy), the heart (left ventricular insufficiency), the retina (visual disturbances) and the mucous membranes (epistaxis). Hypertensive encephalopathy is induced by a break-through of the autoregulation of brain flow, leading to hyperperfusion and, thus to cerebral oedema. The clinical manifestations are characterized by restlessness, severe and diffuse headache, vomiting, nystagmus, impaired vision, dizziness, paraesthesia, seizures and palsies, which may lead - if untreated - to coma and death. The course is usually prolonged and reversible by adequate treatment. The morphological consequences are purpura cerebri, fresh retinal haemorrhages and papillary oedema, apart from left ventricular dilatation and hypertrophy. The diagnostic procedure rests on the quick realization of essential anamnestic (blood pressure, renal disease, drugs), clinical (oedema, cardiac action, central nervous system, fundus) and laboratory parameters (serum creatinine, electrolytes, glucose, blood count, urine). Treatment should start before the manifestation of clinical signs (hypertensive emergency) with rapidly acting antihypertensive drugs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[The hypertensive crisis in childhood]. 305 87

A diencephalic astrocytoma was diagnosed by ultrasonography in a 5 months old girl with nystagmus and emaciation. A 27 months follow-up with ultrasonography, computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging, showed an initial improvement after irradiation and afterwards the development of complications with ventricular dilatation and parenchymal calcifications.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and follow-up of Russel's diencephalic cachexia by echography, x-ray computed tomography and nuclear magnetic resonance]. 333 Jan 95

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

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

A thirty-three-year-old male with Lowe's syndrome had cataract; nystagmus, buphthalmos, prominent frontal bossing, growth and mental retardation, aminoaciduria, proteinuria, rickets, areflexia, genu valgum, piercing cry and head-banging being among the presenting features. The rickety changes improved over a period of years with the administration of vitamin D2. Pathological changes include: (1) tubular damage in the kidneys and hypertrophies of Bowman's capsules; (2) small brain with ventricular dilatation with thickened meninges, small corpus callosum, small size of pyramidal tracts and medial leminisci, neurofibrillary tangles in the pyramidal cells of the Ammon's horn and frontal lobe; (3) eye changes of buphthalmos, congenital cataracts and thickening of Descemet's membrane; (4) testicular atrophy--both testes showing peritubular fibrosis with an increase of fibrous tissue in the interstitial tissue. Azoospermia was present linked with poor development of spermatogonia and spermatocytes. The lumina of the seminiferous tubules were filled with foamy exudate.
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PMID:Clinicopathological studies of oculo cerebrorenal syndrome of Lowe, Terrey and MacLachlan. 738 30

A 27-year-old female was admitted to our department due to gait disturbance and disorientation. Computed tomography (CT) scan revealed symmetrical ventricular dilatation. She was pregnant at 25 weeks of gestation. At the age of 16 years, she had received a ventriculo-peritoneal (VP) shunt for hydrocephalus, induced by a cerebellar medulloblastoma. Neurological examination at the current admission showed that she was disoriented with ataxic gait and convergence nystagmus. Analysis of the cerebrospinal fluid showed normal cell composition. Magnetic resonance images (MRI) and Thalium-single photon emission tomography (CI-SPECT) revealed no recurrence of the tumor. The radio-isotope shunt flow study showed there was no obstruction of the shunt tube or retardation of intraabdominal diffusion. The patient was diagnosed as having shunt malfunction without obstruction of the shunt tube. We performed pumping of a flushing device for the shunt system. As a result her symptom was gradually improved. The follow-up MRI, 20 days after the using, showed complete disappearance of hydrocephalus. She was discharged from our hospital 1 month later. She continued pumping of the flushing device by herself at home. Three months later, she delivered a healthy infant by vaginal labor. She has not need to do pumping after that. And MRI showed no sign of hydrocephalus.
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PMID:[Ventriculoperitoneal shunt malfunction due to pregnancy]. 1648 64

We present 3 children with homozygous null variants in the PPP1R21 gene. A 3-year-old girl had profound developmental delay, hypotonia and weakness, poor feeding, recurrent chest infections and respiratory failure, rotatory nystagmus, absent reflexes, and a homozygous nonsense variant c.2089C>T (p.Arg697*). A 2-year-old boy had profound developmental delay, weakness and hypotonia, recurrent chest infections and respiratory distress, undescended testes, rotatory nystagmus, hyporeflexia, and a homozygous nonsense variant c.427C>T (p.Arg143*). An 11-year-old girl with profound developmental delay, weakness and hypotonia, stereotypic movements, growth failure, hyporeflexia, and a homozygous frameshift variant c.87_88delAG (p.Gly30Cysfs*4). In addition, these children shared common facial features (thick eyebrows, hypertelorism, broad nasal bridge, short nose with upturned nasal tip and broad low-hanging columella, thick lips, low-set ears, and coarse facies with excessive facial hair), and brain abnormalities (cerebellar vermis hypoplasia, ventricular dilatation, and reduced white matter volume). Although PPP1R21 has not yet been linked to human disease, the consistency in the phenotype of individuals from unrelated families, the nature of the variants which result in truncated proteins, and the expected vital role for PPP1R21 in cellular function, all support that PPP1R21 is a novel disease-associated gene responsible for the phenotype observed in these individuals.
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PMID:PPP1R21 homozygous null variants associated with developmental delay, muscle weakness, distinctive facial features, and brain abnormalities. 2980 98