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Query: UMLS:C0917816 (
mental retardation
)
15,867
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thyroid hormone deficiency is frequently associated with central nervous system (CNS) disturbances such as
mental retardation
, convulsions, coma etc. Studies of quantitative changes in CNS in hypo- or hyperthyroidism are scarce. Evoked potentials is a good method of assessing the electrical response of the brain to different (visual, acoustic, somatosensory) stimuli and has been used extensively in the study of brain disturbances and to a lesser degree in metabolic diseases. We studied the visual evoked potentials (latency and amplitude) in 12 patients with hyperthyroidism and 15 patients with hypothyroidism, before treatment and after they became euthyroid. Four of the hyperthyroids (33%) had abnormally prolonged (> 104 msec) latencies before therapy. Two of them had clinical
exophthalmos
. No change was observed after euthyroidism was achieved. On the contrary 7 out of 15 (47%) hypothyroids had abnormally prolonged latencies which became normal in 4 when euthyroidism was achieved. Amplitude was lower than normal in 6 and became normal only in one of them after treatment. None of the hyperthyroid patients had amplitude changes. In conclusion, hypothyroid patients may have changes in the amplitude and/or the latency of visual evoked potentials which are reversible to a great extent with thyroxine. Evoked potentials is another method of studying in humans the metabolic effects of thyroxine deficiency in CNS.
...
PMID:Visual evoked potentials in hypothyroid and hyperthyroid patients before and after achievement of euthyroidism. 149 Nov 23
We describe the concurrence of severe distal osteolysis,
mental retardation
, short stature, and characteristic facial appearance with maxillary hypoplasia and relative
exophthalmos
in two adult sibs, a 57-year-old woman and her deceased brother. Apparently they represent a distinct, autosomal recessive entity in the group of the so-called essential osteolysis. Furthermore, this observation confirms that the facial changes that may occur in patients with essential osteolysis, ie, maxillary hypoplasia and relative
exophthalmos
, may be present in all types of osteolysis, independent of their localisation or inheritance.
...
PMID:Distal osteolysis, short stature, mental retardation, and characteristic facial appearance: delineation of an autosomal recessive subtype of essential osteolysis. 378 13
We experienced two cases of "Osteosclerosis" who were 12 and 15 year old sisters. Previous reported cases of this disease are 50 cases and among them only one patient was reported in Japan. Osteosclerosis seems to be inherited as an autosomal recessive trait. Parental consanguinity is also observed. The peculiar facies are evident in infancy, characterized by broad, flat nasal bridge, ocular hypertelorism and prognathic, broadened mandible. Commonly, they have cutaneous syndactylies in bilateral hands and feet, especially between the second and third finger and toe. Roentgenographically, hyperostosis with osteosclerosis can be observed in systemic bones, particularly the calvarium is greatly thickened. Since such a bony change occurs most severely at the base of the skull, important clinical symptoms of this disease are cranial nerve palsies resulting from obliterations of unilateral or bilateral several cranial nerve foramina. In many cases deafness due to progressive encroachment upon the middle ear cavities and auditory nerve canals appears early in infancy. Transient palsy of the facial nerve occurs somewhat later, and bilateral facial paralyses are usually permanent in adulthood. In some cases optic atrophy and visual field defect due to compression of the optic nerves are late complications. Other ocular symptoms are strabismus, nystagmus and
exophthalmos
. Anosmia and trigeminal nerve palsy are less common. Lower cranial nerve symptoms can not be noted but the reason is unclear. Chronic headache, convulsion and
mental retardation
are occasionally present. They are considered as a result from increased intracranial pressure due to progressive diminution of the cranial capacity. By same mechanism, several patients have died suddenly from impaction of the medulla oblongata in the foramen magnum in early adulthood. Then, some reporter puts emphasis on prophylactic opening of the foramen magnum in all adult cases.
...
PMID:[Sibling case of osteosclerosis with cranial nerve symptoms]. 629 11
The authors report four unrelated girls presenting mild
mental deficiency
and a distinct malformation syndrome, mainly consisting of short stature, macrocranium, peculiar facies with prominent forehead, hypertelorism and
exophthalmos
, cardiac anomalies and cutis laxa with characteristic wrinkled palms and soles, typical ribs, small vertebral bodies and slender long bones. All were sporadic cases of non-consanguineous parents of advanced age at their births, suggesting a de novo autosomal dominant mutation.
...
PMID:Individualization of a syndrome with mental deficiency, macrocranium, peculiar facies, and cardiac and skeletal anomalies. 715 2
A 7 year-old girl is described with a de novo deletion of the short arm of chromosome 10 (qter p13:). The clinical features of:
mental retardation
, a large asymmetric head, antimongoloid slant,
exophthalmos
, epicanthus, ptosis, abnormal ears, pectus excavatum and widely spaced nipples are compared with those of five earlier reported cases with a deletion 10p. The data available suggest the existence of a clinically recognizable monosomy 10p syndrome.
...
PMID:Partial monosomy 10p syndrome. 730 36
A case of cranio-facial dysostosis (Crouzon's disease) associated with enlarged head due to hydrocephalus was reported with special reference to the mechanism of the hydrocephalus. A 2-year-old boy who complained of
mental retardation
was admitted on Dec 78' when choked disc and dilatation of the lateral ventricle shown on CT scan were also seen. Characteristic signs of hypertelorism,
exophthalmos
, hypoplastic maxilla and mandibular prognathism indicating cranio-facial dysostosis (Crouzon's disease) were noted on admission. There were no indicative findings of cranial sutures at all on plain skull film, which was seen on previous film at the age of 11 months. Craniometry on plain film indicated narrowed basal angle and shortening of both anterior and posterior cranial fossas. A moderate symmetrical dilatation of the lateral and third ventricle with normal ranged forth ventricle were shown on CT scan. RI cisternography using 111In was normal without ventricular reflex or subarachnoid block. Choked disc was gradually disappeared following shunting operation performed on Dec. 28, 1978. PVG demonstrated the stenosis and ventral displacement of the aqueduct at the site 7 mm from the outlet of the third ventricle. Poststenotic dilatation for 4 mm in width was also noted. These findings suggested that maldevelopment of the enchondral bone at the skull base in cranio-facial dysostosis produced bending of the aqueduct leading to obstructive hydrocephalus as seen in the case.
...
PMID:[A case of cranio-facial dysostosis (Crouzon's disease) associated with hydrocephalus (author's transl)]. 745 40
We report a patient with Antley-Bixler syndrome and review 13 patients from the literature. The cardinal features of this condition include craniosynostosis, severe mid-face hypoplasia,
proptosis
, choanal atresia/stenosis, frontal bossing, dysplastic ears, depressed nasal bridge, radiohumeral synostosis, long-bone fractures and femoral bowing, urogenital abnormalities and a normal karyotype. Early death was identified in 54% of the reported cases, usually due to respiratory complications. The oldest patient at the time of follow up was 10 years of age. Intellectual performance has been variable (developmental testing of our patient at 30 months of age showed a range of developmental skills equivalent to 6 to 11 months of age). Chronic respiratory distress, especially if accompanied by periods of apnea, may be important in the causation of
mental retardation
. Some patients with the syndrome have normal intelligence, which suggests a normally developing brain, particularly if a craniectomy is performed to treat sutural synostosis and indicates that there may be secondary factors (e.g., apnea) playing a role in the
mental retardation
(as seen in our patient with a history of apnea) in patients with the Antley-Bixler syndrome. Since choanal atresia/stenosis which diminishes the airway passage is a cardinal feature of this syndrome, choanal stenting should be performed on those patients with this finding during infancy to decrease the airway obstruction. All patients followed beyond infancy were ambulatory, including our patient at 35 months of age, who will take steps with assistance. Although most cases are sporadic, there were reports of recurrence in siblings of both sexes in two families, suggesting an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance.
...
PMID:Antley-Bixler syndrome: report of a patient and review of literature. 788 49
The heterogeneous group of craniotubular dysplasias is characterized by modeling errors of the craniofacial and tubular bones. Some conditions in this category cause not only skeletal abnormalities but also a variety of mesoectodermal dysplasias, as exemplified in Lenz-Majewski syndrome (MIM 151050), which comprises craniodiaphyseal dysplasia, failure to thrive,
mental retardation
, proximal symphalangism, enamel hypoplasia, and loose skin. We report on a boy with a hitherto unknown multisystem disorder, including skeletal changes that were regarded as a form of craniotubular dysplasia. The patient had a large head,
exophthalmos
, a broad nasal root, anteverted nostrils, large auricles, thick lips, micrognathia, severe postnatal growth retardation with emaciation, severe mental retardation, sparse hair growth, enamel hypoplasia, and thin, loose skin with hyperlaxity. Skeletal changes consisted of thickened calvaria, sclerosis of the skull base and facial bones, thick ribs, and metaphyseal undermodeling of the tubular bones. In addition, generalized osteopenia was evident. The present disorder overlaps phenotypically with Lenz-Majewski syndrome; nevertheless, the absence of diaphyseal hyperostosis and proximal symphalangism in the present patient was not consistent with Lenz-Majewski syndrome.
...
PMID:Craniotubular dysplasia with severe postnatal growth retardation, mental retardation, ectodermal dysplasia, and loose skin: Lenz-Majewski-like syndrome. 921 75
A small ring-shaped supernumerary marker chromosome (SMC) was detected in 50% of metaphase cells in an 18-month-old boy with
mental retardation
and multiple congenital anomalies. Conventional cytogenetic methods had failed to identify the origin of the marker. When the patient was age 11.5 years, we defined the origin of the SMC by fluorescence in situ hybridization using a battery of centromere-specific DNA probes. The marker was positive with the probe for locus D2Z. More detailed characterization was achieved by using chromosome 2 arm-specific and marker-specific DNA libraries, which were constructed by microdissection of the two arms chromosome 2 and SMC with subsequent amplification of the chromosomal material by a degenerate oligonucleotide-primed polymerase chain reaction (DOP-PCR). The marker was identified as r(2)(p11.2-->q14.1). The propositus had dolichocephaly, coarse hair, low-set ears,
exophthalmos
, epicanthal folds, strabismus, depressed nasal bridge, high-arched palate, excess of skin on the neck, tapered fingers with mild clinodactyly, talipes varus on the right, inguinal hernia, hypogenitalism, muscular hypotonia, and
mental retardation
. This is the first case of SMC derived from chromosome 2 that was characterized by forward and reverse chromosome painting.
...
PMID:Characterization of a small supernumerary ring marker derived from chromosome 2 by forward and reverse chromosome painting. 1056 73
The authors present the case of a 25-year-old female patient, white, with
mental retardation
and
proptosis
, and a history of repeated cerebrovascular events. During investigation elevated levels of homocysteinemia and homocystinuria were demonstrated. The authors present a review of related literature.
...
PMID:Hyperhomocysteinemia--case report. 1276 2
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