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)

Core features of the dominantly inherited myotonic dystrophies are myotonia, muscle weakness and cataract. Classic myotonic dystrophy (Steinert's disease) has been defined as a genetic entity by the underlying CTG repeat expansion on chromosome 19q13.3 (= DM1 locus). Later on, another disorder similar to but different from myotonic dystrophy was described as proximal myotonic myopathy (PROMM). The majority of PROMM families have been linked to a recently discovered locus on chromosome 3q21 (= DM2 locus).--This article analyses the clinical features of 70 patients from 14 German PROMM families linked to the 3q locus. In contrast to Steinert's disease, these patients did not reveal mental deficiency; no congenital type was found; weakness was mainly located in the proximal leg muscles; clinical myotonia was very mild and sometimes absent; episodes of pain occurred. In the majority of patients, the disorder seems to be more benign compared to Steinert's disease. However, life threatening cardiac involvement is possible; rarely, muscle weakness may progress until the patient is bedridden.--Some families with a PROMM-like phenotype do not link to the locus on 3q. The group of the myotonic dystrophies will get new members in the future.
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PMID:The expanding clinical and genetic spectrum of the myotonic dystrophies. 1109 87

The aim of the study is to screen patients for homocystinuria with and without cataract and analyse for homocystine and methionine. Fifty-eight samples from 29 patients, i.e., plasma and urine collected after overnight fasting were analysed by the screening test for homocystine, and paper chromatography for homocystine and methionine. Out of 29 homocystinuric patients, 24 had cataract. Only one had appreciable amounts of methionine in his serum. He also had mental retardation as expected and belongs to Type I. The other types did not have methionine but had only homocystine. There was no mental retardation or ectopia lentis. So they belonged to Types II, III or IV. As there is excess methionine in Type I, with low cystine, cataract may be due to deficiency of cysteine and reduced glutathione and might be averted by suitable therapy, i.e., high cystine-low methionine diet with B6. In other types with low methionine, cataract may be due to decreased availability of amino acids for the synthesis of lens proteins; the treatment of choice should be B12, and folate with methionine.
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PMID:Homocystinuria with congenital/developmental cataract. 1110 22

The report describes two unrelated male children, aged 6 and 8 years, respectively, with congenital periodic alternating nystagmus, congenital strabismus, microcephaly with cortical and cerebellar hypoplasia, mental retardation, low stature, and bat ears. Karyotypes were normal. Neuropediatric and ophthalmologic examinations, radiologic imaging of the brain, and laboratory analyses were performed to exclude other causes of periodic alternating nystagmus, such as ataxia-telangiectasia, acquired disease of the caudal brainstem or the cerebellum, albinism, or loss of vision resulting from cataract or vitreous hemorrhage. The similar morphologic and clinical features of both patients raise the possibility that they have an identical syndrome.
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PMID:Periodic alternating nystagmus in two children with a similar, unusual phenotype. 1111 1

Two cases are described, one with a multifocal cranial and limb neuropathy of adult onset associated with optic neuropathy, and the other with a diffuse demyelinating neuropathy characterized by congenital cataract, mental retardation and progressive lower limb paresis with an onset in childhood. Extensive investigation in both failed to establish the causation. No family history of similar disorder was obtained in either case. Nerve biopsy in both showed similar perineurial abnormalities, the endoneurium being compartmentalized by hypertrophic perineurial cells that exhibited dysplastic features. The appearances resemble those described in a previously reported case of multifocal neuropathy and probably represent an unusual but non-specific response to a peripheral neuropathy.
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PMID:Hypertrophic perineurial dysplasia in multifocal and generalized peripheral neuropathies. 1112 20

Mitochondrial cytochrome b mutations have been reported to have a homogenous phenotype of pure exercise intolerance. We describe a novel mutation in the cytochrome b gene of mitochondrial DNA (A15579G) associated with a selective decrease of muscle complex III activity in a patient who, besides severe exercise intolerance, also has multisystem manifestations (deafness, mental retardation, retinitis pigmentosa, cataract, growth retardation, epilepsy). The point mutation is heteroplasmic in muscle (88%) and leukocytes (15%), and changes a highly conserved tyrosine to cysteine at amino acid position 278.
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PMID:Multisystem disorder associated with a missense mutation in the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene. 1160 7

The Dubowitz syndrome is a rare, autosomal recessive disorder including intrauterine growth retardation, craniofacial abnormalities, mental retardation and eczematous skin eruption. Ocular problems occur in about 20%: strabismus, blefarophimosis, ptosis, telecanthus and epicanthal folds being the most frequent ones. We present a three years old girl, diagnosed with Dubowitz syndrome, with sudden visual loss due to bilateral cataract.
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PMID:Sudden development of bilateral cataract in a child with Dubowitz syndrome: a case report. 1176 56

The authors report a case of de novo duplication 1q32-qter present in a patient with dysmorphic syndrome and developmental delay. This article describes the eighth case of partial trisomy 1q32-qter "pure", without chromosomal abnormalities. In the literature, a dysmorphic "syndrome" is described for trisomy 1q32-qter: hypertelorism, low set and malformed ears, prominent forehead, long philtrum, antimongoloid slanting, foot and digital malformations, cardiovascular abnormalities, urogenital abnormalities, and mental retardation. The ocular defects described in previously reported cases include: cataract, strabismus, hypoplasia of the optic disk, microphthalmia, epicanthal folds, ptosis, persistent tunica vasculosa lentis, and hyaloid vessels, but this seems to be nonspecific of this chromosomal abnormality.
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PMID:[Ocular defects associated with a duplication of the distal part of the long arm of chromosome 1: a case report]. 1201 43

PURPOSE. The purpose of this study was to investigate the ocular, facial and radiological signs of Crouzon's syndrome in a group of older patients who had not undergone previous craniofacial surgery. METHODS. Six cases of Crouzon's syndrome, four of whom belonged to a three-generation family, were examined systemically, ophthalmologically and roentgenographically; five of these cases were additionally evaluated with computed tomography and compared with Apert syndrome. RESULTS. On radiologic evaluation, all cases had synostosis of all cranial sutures and fontanelles and brachycephalic skulls, crowding of the upper teeth due to maxillary hypoplasia, and serious nasal septum deviation. Bilateral ethmoidal, maxillary and sphenoidal chronic sinusitis was found in 50% of cases. Three patients had hypertelorism and two others had a tendency toward hypertelorism. The typical facial appearance with shallow orbits, globe protrusion and exorbitism was present in all cases. Two of them had V-pattern exotropia while the other four were orthophoric. The single case with mental retardation had bilateral cataract. CONCLUSION. Crouzon's syndrome can present with different findings and must be evaluated multidisciplinarly.
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PMID:Evaluation of findings in Crouzon's syndrome. 1204 69

Aniridia is a congenital developmental anomaly of the eye that usually affects both eyes. The development of the iris, cornea, lens, angle, optic nerve and retina is disturbed. Aniridia is most often a hereditary disease with an autosomal dominant, rarely autosomal recessive inheritance, but sporadic cases are also possible. The vision function in aniridia has been observed to have a wide range from blindness to a normal visual acuity. The more serious cases where blindness occurs has been due not specifically to the aniridia but to associated conditions like cataract, glaucoma, foveal hypoplasia, corneal dystrophy, nystagmus. Aniridia could be associated with the mental retardation. Some of the sporadic cases develop Wilms' tumor, frequently as part of the WAGR syndrome (Wilms' tumor, aniridia, genitourinary abnormalities and mental retardation).
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PMID:[Aniridia]. 1208 63

We describe two sibs with postnatal-onset growth deficiency, microcephaly, cataract, prominent supraorbital ridge, large joint contractures, severe osteoporosis, cortical dysplasia, cerebellar atrophy, and mental retardation. The combination appears to constitute a previously undescribed syndrome inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern.
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PMID:Postnatal growth failure, microcephaly, mental retardation, cataracts, large joint contractures, osteoporosis, cortical dysplasia, and cerebellar atrophy. 1249 36


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