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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0403608 (
ureter
)
9,655
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We investigated the urinary tract in 19 out of 30 children having the Williams-Beuren-Syndrome. 14 of these children showed all signs of the syndrome, whereas 8 children had only the typical cardiological findings without the pathognomonic facies and without major
mental retardation
. These two different types will be designed as type I and type II respectively. In 12 of the children belonging to type I there were anomalies of the kidneys and the lower urinary tract including 1 child having nephrocalcinosis. The various anomalies were found as single or combined lesions. As for type II there was only 1 child (out of 5) that showed a stenosis of the urethra and at the origin of the
ureter
in combination with a hydronephrosis. The frequency of anomalies of the urinary tract appears to be very high in type I. However, because of the small number of patients it is impossible to reach statistical significance in comparing the different frequencies within type I and type II. Further investigations are necessary to clarify the problem.
...
PMID:[Syndrome of supravalvular aortic stenosis (Williams-Beuren syndrome) in association with changes in the kidney and efferent urinary tract]. 672 79
We describe a 20-year-old 46,XY woman, with clinical findings of Fraser syndrome and three mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations of Leber hereditary optic neuropathy. The patient had microphthalmia, blindness, widely spaced nipples, bifid
ureter
, syndactyly of the toes, and
mental retardation
. Sonography showed the presence of a uterus and intra-abdominal gonads. The proband was screened for mtDNA mutations because of chronic gastrointestinal pseudo-obstruction, urinary tract dysmotility, seizures,
mental retardation
and persistent macrocytosis, as well as the intermittent elevation of methylmalonic acid. Analysis of point mutations by multiplex polymerase chain reaction and allele-specific oligonucleotide dot-blot hybridization revealed three homoplasmic mtDNA mutations, T14484C, T4216C, and T3394C. This represents a unique case with sex reversal, Fraser-like syndrome, and mitochondrial disease.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial DNA mutations in a patient with sex reversal and clinical features consistent with Fraser syndrome. 1569 63
Wilms tumor gene 1 (WT1) is essential for normal urogenital development. Mutations in WT1 are involved in Wilms tumorigenesis and several associated syndromes, such as Denys-Drash, Frasier, or Wilms tumor, aniridia, genitourinary anomalies, and
mental retardation
syndrome. We report a novel familial WT1 point mutation in the stop codon of exon 10 (1730A/G; X450W) in 3 members of 1 family. The index patient is a 22-year-old woman in whom Wilms tumor and
ureter
duplex were diagnosed at the age of 9 years and who subsequently developed slow progressive nephropathy. Her mother also had late-onset nephropathy that led to end-stage renal failure, whereas renal function in 1 brother of the index patient was not impaired. We hypothesize that this type of mutation (read-through), which leads to an elongated, but otherwise unchanged, WT1 protein, may be associated with incomplete penetrance and a relatively late onset of both Wilms tumor and nephropathy in this family.
...
PMID:Novel familial WT1 read-through mutation associated with Wilms tumor and slow progressive nephropathy. 1595 41
Mutations in the X-chromosomal gene (L1CAM) for cell adhesion molecule L1 are associated with a heterogeneous group of conditions that include agenesis of the corpus callosum, hydrocephalus, spastic paraplegia, adducted thumbs and
mental retardation
(L1-spectrum disease, CRASH or MASA syndrome). Although L1CAM is expressed during renal development and L1cam-deficient mice have congenital malformations of the kidney and the urinary tract, L1CAM mutations have not been associated with renal anomalies in men. We report on a boy with prenatally detected hydrocephalus. After his birth, bilateral duplex kidneys and ureters, with a unilateral mega-
ureter
serving a hydronephrotic upper pole, as well as agenesis of the corpus callosum, adducted thumbs, spasticity, and
mental retardation
were recognized, fulfilling the criteria of an L1-spectrum disease. Genetic testing of the patient and his mother identified a 2 bp deletion in the invariant splice consensus sequence of intron 18 of L1CAM, predicting a largely truncated or absent protein. At the age of 9 years, 7 years after heminephrectomy, the boy has normal renal function. This observation suggests that patients with L1CAM mutations may have renal abnormalities as seen in the L1cam-deficient mouse model. L1CAM might, therefore, also be considered a possible candidate gene for renal malformations.
...
PMID:L1CAM mutation in a boy with hydrocephalus and duplex kidneys. 1729 22
WAGR syndrome is caused by an 11p13 deletion and includes Wilms' tumor, aniridia, genitourinary anomalies and
mental retardation
. We encountered a case of a dysgerminoma originating in an ectopic ovary in a woman with WAGR syndrome. Our patient was a 24-year-old nulliparous woman who was diagnosed with WAGR syndrome. The patient had undergone left nephrectomy for a Wilms' tumor and postoperative chemotherapy at the age of 7 months. She also had a history of glaucoma surgery in both eyes, and was followed up at the Department of Pediatrics for diabetes mellitus, hypertension, liver dysfunction and hyperuricemia. The patient was investigated for oliguria and had elevated levels of blood urea nitrogen (45 mg/dl) and creatinine (5.4 mg/dl); she was admitted to the hospital with acute renal failure and a computed tomography scan revealed a pelvic tumor with a long axis of 10 cm that was obstructing the right
ureter
. Following insertion of a ureteral stent, the tumor was removed. The tumor had developed in the retroperitoneal space independent of the ovaries. The right adnexa were normal. The tumor was histopathologically diagnosed as dysgerminoma. Follicles were found in part of the tumor; it was thus hypothesized that the tumor developed from an ectopic ovary. The patient was administered etoposide after surgery, and has been recurrence-free for 4 years since treatment.
...
PMID:Dysgerminoma developing from an ectopic ovary in a patient with WAGR syndrome: A case report. 2788 34