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)

A de novo partial 13q monosomy is reported in a severely affected 8-year-old female with the karyotype 46,XX,del(13)(q32). Abnormal features included mental retardation, delayed development, microcephaly, encephalocele, hearing loss, hypertelorism, ptosis, flat nasal bridge, protruding upper incisors, facial asymmetry, short neck, hypoplastic thumbs, scoliosis and clubfeet. The deletion was demonstrable by R-banding but was not apparent by GTG banding. The locus for esterase D (EC 3.1.1.1) is excluded from the deleted segment 13q32 leads to 13qter.
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PMID:Long arm deletion of chromosome 13 with exclusion of esterase D from 13q32 leads to 13qter. 739 15

A male clinically affected by the OEIS complex was studied. His mother, aged 30 years, has an affective disorder and ingested 30 mg of Diazepam daily, from 3 months previous to the gestation and during the entire pregnancy. At birth, a closure during the entire pregnancy. At birth, a closure defect of the anterior abdominal wall, exstrophy of hemibladders, exposure of intestinal epithelium, abnormal pelvis, imperforate anus, and bifid penis were noted. Birth weight was 3600 g and other measurements were not recorded. Colostomy was performed in the postnatal period followed by partial closure of the abdominal wall defect, and iliac osteotomies. At six years, 6 months of age, physical examination showed somatometric measurements around the third percentile (height 109 cm, weight 17 kg, cephalic circumference 48.5 cm). Clinically he presented mild mental retardation, functional colostomy, incomplete closure of the vesical exstrophy, imperforate anus, bifid penis and scrotum, descended testes, diastasis of pubis, lumbosacral scoliosis and shortening of the left leg (clinical photograph of the external features is not included as we were not able to obtain authorization to do so). Radiological studies (Figure 1) revealed wide separation of the ischiopubic bones; lumbosacral region with rotoscoliosis, platyspondyly and dysraphism; left coxa valga, and right coxa vara. The abdominal ultrasonographic studies showed unilateral renal agenesis (left). Chromosomal analysis (GTG bands) in peripheral blood lymphocyte cultures demonstrated a normal 46,XY constitution. Exposure to other substances, particularly alcohol, were excluded with the study of the mother's medical history and through information obtained from relatives.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Omphalocele-exstrophy-imperforate-anus-spina bifida (OEIS) complex in a male prenatally exposed to diazepam. 771 56

We report on a 4-year-old boy with typical frontonasal dysostosis and an apparently balanced de novo translocation involving chromosomes 3, 7, and 11, and four breakpoints. The karyotype was 46,XY,t(7;3)(3;11) (7pter-->7q21.3::3q27-->3qter;3pter-->3 q23::11q21-->11qter; 11pter-->11q21::3q23-->3q27::7q21.3-->7 qter). In situ hybridization with a chromosome 3 painting probe confirmed the interpretation from GTG banding. The child had a widow's peak, marked hypertelorism, absence of the nasal tip, and widely separated nares. He also had an atrial septal defect, micropenis, small testes, clubfeet, scoliosis, block C2-4, and structural brain abnormalities on MRI. In review we found two other cases of frontonasal dysostosis with chromosome abnormalities, neither of which was similar to our case. The presence of a de novo (apparently) balanced translocation in our patient may help to locate the gene(s) for frontonasal dysplasia and perhaps other midline craniofacial malformations.
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PMID:Syndromal frontonasal dysostosis in a child with a complex translocation involving chromosomes 3, 7, and 11. 776 93

We report on a 43-year-old woman who was referred for evaluation because of minor facial anomalies, myopathy, sterility, short stature, hearing loss, downward slant of palpebral fissures, bilateral ptosis, severe micro/retrognathia, high arched palate, and scoliosis. Cytogenetic analyses utilizing GTG/CBG bandings showed presence of one i(1p) and one i(1q) without normal chromosome 1 homologues. Fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis showed hybridization to only two chromosomes, consistent with the G-banded interpretation of i(1p) and i(1q). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case of isochromosomes 1p and 1q replacing the two normal chromosome 1s. Molecular investigations using markers for chromosome 1 showed inheritance of only one set of paternal alleles and absence of any maternal alleles in the patient. The adverse phenotype of the patient may be due to one or more recessive mutations, genomic imprinting, or a combination of both.
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PMID:Uniparental isodisomy resulting from 46,XX,i(1p),i(1q) in a woman with short stature, ptosis, micro/retrognathia, myopathy, deafness, and sterility. 1021 43

Congenital left ventricular diverticulum is rare and usually isolated or associated with midline thoracoabdominal defects and other congenital cardiac malformations. We describe a case with a previously undescribed malformation syndrome including bilateral obstruction of the ureteropelvic junction, agenesis of corpus callosus, scoliosis, hip dysplasia, severe developmental delay, failure to thrive and congenital left ventricular diverticulum but with normal GTG-banded karyotype. The cardiac lesion was suspected on echocardiography and was confirmed by cineangiography, which outlined a huge apical diverticulum opening through a wide ostium into the left ventricular cavity. To our knowledge this case report is the first description of an association with such a malformation syndrome.
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PMID:A congenital left ventricular diverticulum combined with a complex malformation syndrome. 1284 10