Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0700208 (scoliosis)
8,574 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cleidocranial dysostosis (CCD) is a rare congenital disorder characterized by the heredity, the disturbance of the ossification of the skull and clavicles, and dental anomaly. The entity of CCD was established by Marie and Sainton in 1898. In Japan about 150 cases have been reported since Haneda's first report in 1933. Recently we experienced a rare case of CCD associated with the temporal arachnoid cyst. The patient was a 61-year-old male who had suffered from mild spastic paresis of the left upper extremity since his childhood. One morning he suddenly noticed motor weakness of the left upper and lower extremities and was transferred to our hospital. On admission we observed the left hemiparesis (MMT 3/5), the left central type facial palsy, and the left long tract signs. Physical examination disclosed frontal bossing, depression of the forehead, sloped shoulders, cone-shaped thorax, and thoracic scoliosis. Plain skull radiograph showed persistent metopic suture and frontal fontanelle, many wormian bones around coronal and lambdoid sutures. Plain radiographs of the systemic bones also showed typical features of CCD such as dysplasia of the lateral third of the bilateral clavicles, deformities of the cervical vertebral bodies, thoracic scoliosis, and wide symphysis. CT scan disclosed the right putaminal hemorrhage, the right temporal arachnoid cyst, enlargement of the right middle fossa, thinning of the temporal bone adjacent to the arachnoid cyst. It also showed the atrophy of the right cerebral peduncle and midbrain. Surgical treatment was performed to remove the hematoma and release the cyst. Several neurological disorders associated with CCD have been reported such as epilepsy, mental retardation, spastic paresis etc.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of cleidocranial dysostosis associated with arachnoid cyst]. 343 33

Spondylocostal dysostosis is a congenital disorder characterized by multiple malformations of the vertebrae and ribs. We describe the sonographic features of an affected fetus at 12 and 14 weeks of gestation. The fetus had thoracic scoliosis, multiple vertebral and rib malformations and a grossly dilated stomach that had herniated into the chest through a left-sided diaphragmatic hernia. The stomach spanned the whole length of the fetal trunk.
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PMID:Prenatal sonographic features of spondylocostal dysostosis and diaphragmatic hernia in the first trimester. 1020 17

We present the MR imaging findings of a girl with horizontal gaze palsy and progressive scoliosis (HGPPS). HGPPS is a rare congenital disorder characterized by absence of conjugate horizontal eye movements and accompanied by progressive scoliosis developing in childhood and adolescence. MR imaging depicted brain-stem hypoplasia with absence of the facial colliculi, presence of a deep midline pontine cleft (split pons sign), and a butterfly configuration of the medulla. These MR imaging features suggest the diagnosis of HGPPS and correlate with the clinical findings. We hypothesize that maldevelopment of dorsomedial brain-stem structures plays a crucial role in the pathogenesis of HGPPS.
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PMID:MR imaging of brain-stem hypoplasia in horizontal gaze palsy with progressive scoliosis. 1520 46

The Marshall-Smith syndrome (MSS) is rare congenital disorder, characterized by a triad of orofacial dysmorphism, failure to thrive, and accelerated osseous maturation. An 8-year-old boy with MSS associated with congenital glaucoma, corneal erosion, laryngomalacia, glossoptosis, choanal stenoses, bilateral peripheral hearing defect, ventriculomegaly, congenital heart disease (atrial septal defect), chronic pulmonary disease, and scoliosis was reported. A tracheostomy with endotracheal tube insertion was performed for his difficult airway. He has longer survival time than those MSS patients hitherto reported. High-resolution chromosome banding and extensive metabolic investigation did not detect any abnormality, except for low blood levels of zinc and thyroxine. Besides, brain atrophy with hypoplastic cerebellum and brainstem, and bilateral hydronephrosis with hydroureter were detected by image studies.
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PMID:Long-term follow-up of Marshall-Smith syndrome: report of one case. 1562 71

Schistosomus reflexus (SR) is a rare and fatal congenital disorder. Primarily observed in ruminants, its defining features include spinal inversion, exposure of the abdominal viscera because of a fissure of the ventral abdominal wall, limb ankylosis, positioning of the limbs adjacent to the skull and, lung and diaphragm hypoplasia. Variable components of SR include scoliosis, cleft sternum, exposure of thoracic viscera, and abnormalities of the digestive and urogenital systems. This report presents the findings from an anatomical analysis of a female Holstein SR calf with thoracoschisis, scoliosis and anomalies of the appendicular skeleton, cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive and urogenital systems. Many of these malformations have not been previously reported. The reproductive tract of this case is particularly unique, displaying Muellerian duct abnormalities. These abnormalities suggest SR occurs as early as the post-gastrulation embryo and involves the intermediate mesoderm. Preliminary analysis of associated cases suggests that SR has a genetic aetiology.
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PMID:Schistosomus reflexus syndrome: a heritable defect in ruminants. 1615 73

We report the case of a child with horizontal gaze palsy, pendular nystagmus, and discrete thoracolumbar scoliosis. MR imaging of the brain depicted pons hypoplasia with an absence of the facial colliculi, hypoplasia, butterfly configuration of the medulla, and the presence of a deep midline pontine cleft (split pons sign). These MR imaging findings suggest familial horizontal gaze palsy with progressive kyphoscoliosis, a rare congenital disorder. To the best of our knowledge, MR imaging findings of only 4 similar cases, with or without progressive idiopathic scoliosis, have been reported. We discuss the pathogenesis substratum of this entity. Early recognition of this rare entity is important if supportive therapeutic measures in progressive scoliosis are to be applied.
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PMID:MR imaging features of brain stem hypoplasia in familial horizontal gaze palsy and scoliosis. 1729 77

Klippel-Feil syndrome (KFS) is a congenital disorder of spinal segmentation distinguished by the bony fusion of anterior/cervical vertebrae. Scoliosis, mirror movements, otolaryngological, kidney, ocular, cranial, limb, and/or digit anomalies are often associated. Here we report mutations at the GDF6 gene locus in familial and sporadic cases of KFS including the recurrent missense mutation of an extremely conserved residue c.866T>C (p.Leu289Pro) in association with mirror movements and an inversion breakpoint downstream of the gene in association with carpal, tarsal, and vertebral fusions. GDF6 is expressed at the boundaries of the developing carpals, tarsals, and vertebrae and within the adult vertebral disc. GDF6 knockout mice are best distinguished by fusion of carpals and tarsals and GDF6 knockdown in Xenopus results in a high incidence of anterior axial defects consistent with a role for GDF6 in the etiology, diversity, and variability of KFS.
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PMID:Mutations in GDF6 are associated with vertebral segmentation defects in Klippel-Feil syndrome. 1842 97

Horizontal gaze palsy with progressive scoliosis (HGPPS) is a rare congenital disorder characterized by absence of conjugate horizontal eye movements and progressive scoliosis developing in childhood and adolescence. We present a child with clinical and neuroimaging findings typical of HGPPS. CT and MRI of the brain demonstrated pons hypoplasia, absence of the facial colliculi, butterfly configuration of the medulla and a deep midline pontine cleft. We briefly discuss the imaging aspects of this rare entity in light of the current literature.
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PMID:Horizontal gaze palsy with progressive scoliosis: CT and MR findings. 1902 Aug 72

Klippel-Trenaunay-Weber syndrome (KTWS) is a rare congenital disorder, characterized by capillary, venous and lymphatic vascular malformations in association with bone and soft tissue hypertrophy. We report a KTWS patient with extensive hemangiomatosis of the right lower limb, trunk and upper limbs; bone and soft tissue hypertrophy of upper limbs, scapular girdle and right lower limb; and muscle atrophy on left lower limb with marked body asymmetry, scoliosis and toe malformations. These pathological features are associated with moderate mental retardation, mild renal and hepatic abnormalities. We identified by array CGH (Comparative Genomic Hybridization) a submicroscopic deletion 2q37.3 that could be related to impaired cognitive function. To our knowledge this is the first reported 2q37.3 microdeletion in a patient with KTWS.
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PMID:Terminal deletion 2q37.3 in a patient with Klippel-Trenaunay-Weber syndrome. 2343 94

Horizontal gaze palsy with progressive scoliosis (HGPPS) is a rare congenital disorder characterized by absence of conjugate horizontal eye movements and accompanied by progressive scoliosis developing in childhood and adolescence. It occurs due to mutation in ROBO 3 gene/chromosome 11q23-q25. We report a case of a 60-year-old lady who presented with complaints of defective vision in both eyes. On examination, she had scoliosis with restricted abduction and adduction in both eyes with intact elevation and depression. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain and orbit showed brainstem hypoplasia with absence of facial colliculi, presence of a deep midline pontine cleft (split pons sign), and a butterfly configuration of the medulla, which are the radiological findings seen in this disorder.
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PMID:Horizontal gaze palsy with progressive scoliosis - A case report. 2908 75


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