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)

Estimates of the need for neurologists must be based ultimately on the frequency of neurologic disease. Community-based population surveys for diseases or injuries that have come to medical attention provide annual incidence rates per 100,000 population, point prevalence rates per 100,000, and average duration in years. For 61 disorders, including for 8 only those fractions that were thought to require neurologic attention, the annual incidence rates summed to 2500 per 100,000 or 2.5% of the population. For 55 of these conditions, including for 6 only the neurologic fraction and excluding all mental retardation, blindness, deafness, or psychosis, the point prevalence rates summed to 9500 per 100,000 population. Even if we also excluded all headache, all trauma, all alcoholism, and all vertebrogenic pain states, 3.6% of the general population at any one time should be under neurologic care. Substracting all these exclusions from the incidence rates similarly leaves more than 1 person in every 100 who each year will have a new neurologic disorder that requires the attention of a physician competent in clinical neurology.
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PMID:The current neurologic burden of illness and injury in the United States. 689 Jan 53

Haloperidol is safe and effective in children for relieving psychotic symptoms associated with childhood autism, schizophrenia and mental retardation. It is the drug of choice for Tourette's syndrome, and may be useful in nonpsychotic hyperactive or aggressive children to control acute episodes, or when the stimulants normally useful in hyperactive children are ineffective. Such children taking haloperidol not only become calmer, but are often better able to respond to other modalities of therapy and to school instruction. Dosage, initially low, is increased gradually to minimize drowsiness and extrapyramidal symptoms, the most common side effects. Haloperidol in children is usually well-tolerated.
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PMID:Haloperidol -- its use in children. 693 55

A series of children with mild mental retardation (171 children, IQ 50-69) born in 1959-1970 in a northern Swedish county and registered by the Board for Provisions and Services to the Mentally Retarded were analysed retrospectively. The mean annual incidence of mild mental retardation in registered children alive at the age of one year decreased during the period 1959-1970 and for the whole period was 4.2 per 1000, compared with 3.9 per 1000 for severe mental retardation in the same period of time and area. Ten children once classified as mildly mentally retarded made considerable intellectual progress and after some time no longer needed special help from the authorities. There was a pronounced male excess in the total series (1.8:1) and in all the main aetiological groups. Only small differences were found in mean birth weights, gestational age and maternal age in the main aetiological groups. In the series as a whole, however, there was an increased frequency of children small for gestational age. Prenatal causes were considered relevant in 43 per cent, perinatal in 7 per cent, and postnatal in 5 per cent. In 2 per cent there was a psychosis. In 43 per cent the aetiology could not be traced. Genetic causes were found in 31 per cent; in 8 per cent there was a chromosomal aetiology, in a further 8 per cent a mutant gene disorder and in 15 per cent the aetiology were considered multifactorial, i.e. at least one first-degree relative also had mental retardation and in both cases the cause of the retardation was unknown. Thirty per cent of the children had associated CNS handicaps, epilepsy (16 per cent) being the most frequent.
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PMID:Mild mental retardation in children in a northern Swedish county. 697 47

Twenty-four infantile autistic children were compared with 12 children with other kinds of childhood psychoses, 5 children with so-called minimal brain dysfunction syndrome, 5 children with attention deficit disorder, 14 children with mental retardation, and 19 normal children with regard to chromatographic profiles of urinary products that give ultraviolet absorbency at 280 nm. Six main types of chromatographic patterns emerged. Fifty-four percent of the autistic children and 17% of the children with other psychoses showed a distinct pattern that was not seen in any other cases. Only 8% of the autistic children showed the "normal" pattern seen in 95% of the normal and 93% of the mentally retarded children without psychosis. The ultraviolet absorbency peaks of the chromatograms possibly correspond to peptides and protein-associated peptide complexes. It is argued that these products are probably at least partly of CNS origin.
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PMID:Childhood psychosis and urinary excretion of peptides and protein-associated peptide complexes. 715 98

Two double-blind trials comparing loxapine and thioridazine were conducted in hospitalized adult males diagnosed as having symptoms of chronic psychosis associated with organic brain syndrome or mental retardation. The drugs were administered orally in the ranges of loxapine 10--150 mg/day and thioridazine 150--750 mg/day for 13 weeks. In the first trial loxapine was found to be generally superior to thioridazine on the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, Nurses Observation Scale for In-Patient Evaluation and Clinical Global Impression. The second trial failed to confirm this superiority. The heterogeneity of diagnostic categories included may explain the discrepancy. Extra-pyramidal symptoms and sedative effects were common to both groups and consistent with the pharmacologic profiles of the study drugs.
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PMID:Loxapine versus thioridazine in the treatment of organic psychosis. 735

A Progressive Figure Drawing Test was assembled to delineate level of perceptual-motor development in patients with both developmental and psychiatric disorders. 63 mentally retarded psychotic adults were evaluated by this procedure and other measures of intellectual, social, and psychiatric functioning. The test's reliability and developmental hierarchy were supported, and significant differentiation among grades of retardation was noted. Strong correlates were obtained with the other developmentally based tests while its associations with indices of psychosis were significantly weaker or inconsequential. The findings suggested that this procedure may separate cognitive subnormality from abnormality related to psychosis. It was proposed that developmental assessment may provide a crucial perspective for clinical evaluation and research into mental retardation and psychosis.
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PMID:Progressive Figure drawings in the developmental assessment of mentally retarded psychotics. 737 12

The symptomatology of psychiatric inpatients with mild mental retardation was compared with that of a matched sample of inpatients without mental retardation. An integration of the developmental position on mental retardation with the developmental approach to adult psychopathology generated the hypotheses that, compared to patients without mental retardation, patients with mild mental retardation would display (a) more symptoms indicative of turning against others and fewer symptoms indicative of turning against the self, (b) more symptoms involving expression in action rather than thought, and (c) psychotic symptom pictures that more frequently involve hallucinations without delusions and infrequently involve delusions alone. All hypotheses were confirmed.
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PMID:Developmental differences in the symptomatology of psychiatric inpatients with and without mild mental retardation. 769 82

Using a method of analysis which consists in the evaluation of the mitotic index of lymphocyte cultures to which different metabolites and anti-metabolites have been added, we studied various forms of mental retardation due to a chromosomal aberration and observed specific biochemical imbalances. Methotrexate sensitivity is characteristic of trisomy 21. A significant difference in purine synthesis pathway was observed between patients with Down syndrome without complications and those presenting with additional psychotic features. Inspite of a gene dosage effect for genes intervening in purine synthesis, lymphocytes from psychotic trisomy 21 patients seem unable to complete inosine synthesis. Lymphocytes from patients with Alzheimer's disease with or without trisomy 21 are excessively sensitive to exogenous glutamine.
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PMID:[Metabolic anomalies in trisomy 21: a method for analyzing lymphocyte cultures]. 774 68

This report presents a survey of disabling conditions conducted by village health communicators (VHCs) in 1989 in a rural northern Thai community. The disabled were first identified by a VHC and then examined clinically and socially by a health care team both to confirm the clinical diagnosis and to formulate an appropriate treatment plan. The overall prevalence rate of disabled persons was 6.3/1,000 population. The prevalence rate was higher for males than females and increased with age. Locomotor disability (48.8%) was the most commonly identified disabling condition, with visual disability (27.8%) the next most common. Communication disorders, mental retardation, and psychosis constituted the remaining 23.4%. Of the locomotor disabilities, the major disabling conditions were poliomyelitis, congenital malformations, traumatic amputations, and cerebral palsy. Unoperated cataract accounted for 72.0% of all cases with visual disabilities. While the true magnitude of the disability problem may be somewhat understated, the data reported in this study clearly reveal that there are many persons with untreated disabling conditions in rural communities, and that a significant number of them can benefit from medical treatment and rehabilitation. A survey utilizing VHCs may be helpful to identify the disabled in rural communities.
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PMID:Prevalence of disabling conditions in a rural northern Thai community: a survey conducted by village health communicators. 782 25

N,N-dimethiltryptamine (DMT) in urine has been quantified on an 83-psychiatric patient sample. Sample covered patients who had sometimes been administered neuroleptic drugs as well as patients with some particular symptomatology associated to psychotic disorders such as hallucinations, delusions, perception disorders, etc. 43.3% (36 cases) evidenced an abnormally high DMT in urine (0.9-13.5 mcg/24 h). Higher values were more frequently found in both schizophrenic patients, and non-schizophrenic patients with either hallucinations, delusions, anorexia or bulimia. Most patients with DMT normal values (< 0.5 mcg/24 h) presented either mental retardation, cerebral atrophy or dysrhythmias. A very good correlation was found between urinary DMT abnormally high values, and patients' improvement after such patients had been treated with neuroleptic drugs.
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PMID:[Elimination of N,N-dimethyltryptamine by urine]. 790 22


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