Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0917816 (mental retardation)
15,867 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two consecutive short gut babies with a residual small intestinal length of 44 and 46 cm, respectively, were managed initially by total parenteral nutrition and oral feedings begun around the fifth week postoperatively. Uncontrollable diarrhea, malabsorption, and failure to thrive made the early management of these babies a difficult problem. The two infants developed clinical features of hypothyroidism at the age of 4 and 6 mo, respectively. Hypothyroxinemia was confirmed by repeated detection of low serum levels of T4. Hormonal treatment resulted in clinical recovery and normalized T4 values. Thyroid function has remained normal after discontinuation of treatment, underlining the transient nature of hypothyroidism. Early recognition and therapy of this previously unreported association is essential in order to prevent mental retardation.
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PMID:Transient hypothyroidism associated with short gut syndrome. 707 72

We report on a 12 1/2-year-old boy with bilateral testicular enlargement. After an extensive evaluation we eliminated precocious puberty, hypothyroidism, congenital adrenal hyperplasia, X-linked mental retardation and bilateral malignant testicular neoplasms from consideration. Diagnosis was benign macro-orchidism. The clinical and laboratory features of this condition are sufficiently distinct from the other causes of testicular enlargement to allow a diagnosis to be made without testicular biopsy or orchiectomy.
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PMID:Benign macro-orchidism in a pubescent boy. 721 69

This work reports the presence of endemic cretinism in a small district located inside an endemic goiter area in north-eastern Sicily, personally described. The study covers 19 mental defectives (11 females and 8 males, mean age 35.8 +/- 15.5 yr) selected on the basis of severe mental retardation recognized by the local doctors. No systematic survey for cretinism was carried out in the total population. Marked mental retardation was evident in all subjects. Nine of them exhibited clinical and biochemical signs of hypothyroidism (myxedematous cretins). The 10 others were clinically euthyroid and had deaf-mutism and/or pyramidal tract dysfunction (neurological cretinism). Familial aggregation of cretinism was also observed. In both myxedematous and neurological cretins and urinary iodine excretion was very low, but not significantly different from that recorded in the euthyroid controls of the same area. The data available do not clarify the pathogenesis of endemic cretinism in Sicily. However, the marked height retardation, the observation of delayed bone maturation and the severity of mental deficiency suggest that thyroid failure was present in early life. The presence of endemic cretinism today in Sicily constitutes a strong argument in favour of the immediate introduction of adequate iodine prophylaxis.
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PMID:Endemic cretinism in Sicily. 732 Apr 34

Thirty-nine children at 7 to 9 years of age with congenital hypothyroidism have been studied with respect to their intellectual, neurological and social functions. Their intellectual achievement as assessed by the WISC test, was significantly lower than in a reference population (mean IQ 88, range 50-113). In children who showed signs and symptoms of hypothyroidism during their first four weeks of life, there was a negative correlation between the age when therapy was started and intellectual development. No such correlation was found in children who showed signs and symptoms after the first four weeks of life. Nine children of 26 with signs of hypothyroidism in the neonatal period, were found to have neurological abnormalities consisting of fine and gross motor disturbances. The neurological abnormalities seriously affected daily life in only the two most severely mentally retarded. No correlation was found between the age when the therapy was started and neurological abnormalities. Three children attended special schools because of mental retardation and six attended normal schools but required additional teaching assistance for learning disabilities. Our results suggest that the risk of future intellectual handicaps may be reduced by early treatment in children with hypothyroidism presenting during the neonatal period.
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PMID:Congenital hypothyroidism in Sweden. Psychomotor development in patients detected by clinical signs and symptoms. 732 45

Endocrine disorders associated with mental retardation are described in relation to clinical characteristics, pathogenesis, diagnostic procedures, and treatment. Some endocrine disorders, particularly hypothyroidism, nephrogenic-diabetes insipidus, and hypoglycemic conditions, are frequently associated with mental retardation. Early diagnosis and prompt and proper management reduce mortality and the incidence of mental retardation associated with endocrine disorders.
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PMID:Endocrine disorders associated with mental retardation. 739 67

An eight-year-old black male with severe growth and mental retardation presented with massive myxedema, hyponatremia, and hypothermia. History of hypothyroidism was confirmed by laboratory investigation. The hypothyroidism appeared to be secondary to organic pituitary insufficiency due to diffuse brain damage. Appropriate therapeutic response was achieved initially only with intravenous thyroxine therapy. This case is reported to illustrate the unusual association of secondary hypothyroidism with severe myxedema and hyponatremia in the pediatric age group. The physiopathology of hyponatremia in hypothyroid myxedema is discussed also.
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PMID:Hypothyroid myxedema and hyponatremia in an eight-year-old child: a case report. 739 90

A new case of Johanson-Blizzard's syndrome is reported. It concerns a boy born to consanguineous parents and who died at the age of 10 months from malnutrition. Anal imperforation, alar agenesia, hair anomalies, mental retardation and external pancreatic failure were associated. Neither deafness nor hypothyroidism appeared to be present. Autopsy revealed lipomatous hypoplasia of the exocrine pancreas, hitherto unobserved in this syndrome, and probably responsible for the external pancreatic failure noted in published cases. The variability within a given family of the Johanson-Blizzard malformative syndrome is illustrated by two other cases reported in the anamnesis, one involving a brother who had died earlier with cutaneous aplasia at the fontanella and lacrimal canal malposition and one involving a second cousin who presented with isolated anal imperforation.
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PMID:[Johanson-Blizzard's syndrome: another cause of pancreatic lipomatosis (author's transl)]. 746 79

Callosal connections were studied with tracers (horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP)) in normal rats and rats deprived of thyroid hormones with methimazole (Sigma) since embryonic day 14 and thyroidectomized at postnatal day 6. In hypothyroid rats, the auditory areas, in particular the primary auditory area, showed cytoarchitectonic changes including blurred lamination and decrease in the size of layer V pyramidal neurons. In control rats, callosally-projecting neurons were found between layers II and VI with a peak in layer III and upper layer IV. In hypothyroid rats, labelled neurons were found between layers IV and VI with two peaks corresponding to layer IV and upper layer V, and in upper layer VI. Quantitative analysis of radial distribution of callosally-projecting neurons confirmed their shift to infragranular layers in hypothyroid rats. Three-dimensional reconstructions showed a more continuous tangential distribution of callosally-projecting neurons in hypothyroid rats which may be due to the maintenance of a juvenile 'exuberant' pattern of projections. These changes in cortical connectivity may be relevant for understanding epilepsy and mental retardation associated with early hypothyroidism in humans and to clarify basic mechanisms of cortical development.
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PMID:Organization of auditory callosal connections in hypothyroid adult rats. 750 71

This is the first reported case of dystonia with a partial deletion of the long arm (q) of chromosome 18. Neurologic findings in the 18q- syndrome include mental retardation, seizures, nystagmus, incoordination, tremor, and chorea. A 36-year-old woman with an 18q terminal deletion [karyotype 46,XX,del(18)(q22.2)] had hypothyroidism, diabetes mellitus, borderline intelligence, short stature, short neck, sensorineural hearing loss, and sensorimotor axonal neuropathy. Parents' karyotypes were normal. She had had incoordination and writing difficulty since childhood. Posturing and tremor of the head began at age 16, followed by arm tremors. She had jaw deviation and tremor, neck tremor with retrocollis, involuntary pronation of the right arm, coarse postural and severe action tremor, and tight pen grip with dystonic wrist extension on writing. The 18q- syndrome should be added to the list of genetic causes of secondary dystonia. A karyotype analysis should be considered in secondary dystonias, particularly when there are associated features such as short stature and endocrinopathies.
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PMID:Dystonia in a patient with deletion of 18q. 756 32

Resistance to thyroid hormone (RTH) is an inherited syndrome characterized by reduced tissue responsiveness to thyroid hormone. Subjects have elevated serum thyroid hormone levels in association with a nonsuppressed TSH. Goiter and thyroid test abnormalities have most often led to further investigation, underscoring the paucity of specific clinical manifestations of RTH. Hypothyroidism has been considered when growth or mental retardation was the presenting symptom and thyrotoxicosis when dealing with attention deficit or hyperactivity. Failure to recognize the inappropriate persistence of TSH secretion, in spite of elevated thyroid hormone levels, has commonly resulted in erroneous diagnosis leading to treatment aimed to normalize the thyroid hormone level. More than 400 subjects with this syndrome have been identified. The mode of inheritance appears to be autosomal dominant in the majority of families. It has long been suspected that RTH is most likely caused by an abnormal thyroid hormone receptor (TR), but this hypothesis could not be directly tested until the isolation of two TR genes, TR alpha and TR beta, located in chromosomes 17 and 3, respectively. TR beta gene mutations have been recently identified in 68 families with RTH. All mutations are located in the T3-binding domain, straddling the putative TR-dimerization region. Mutant TRs exhibit hormone-binding impairment, the degree of which does not correlate with the severity of clinical manifestations. This finding, and the fact that heterozygous subjects with complete TR deletion are not affected, while those with point mutations are, indicated that interactions of the mutant TRs with normal TRs and with other factors, are responsible for the dominant inheritance of RTH and its clinical heterogeneity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Resistance to thyroid hormone: an historical overview. 783 74


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