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Query: UMLS:C0917816 (
mental retardation
)
15,867
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cockayne's syndrome is a very rare autosomal recessive affection. Ocular involvement is an essential element for positive diagnosis; the retina shows a typical salt and pepper retinitis with optical atrophy. We report a family with four brothers who had Cockayne's syndrome with unusual retinal involvement. The patients' parents were first cousins. Ophthalmologic examination of the mother showed unilateral left pigmentary retinopathy localized in the peripapillary region. The father's ophthalmological examination was normal. The four brothers presented disharmonious dwarfism, cutaneous hyperpigmentation of skin areas exposed to sun with old-appearance of the skin, sensorineural deafness, kyphoscoliosis, a cerebellar syndrome and
mental retardation
. The ophthalmological examination showed hypermetropia in all four brothers and bilateral maculopathy with no papillary or vascular abnormalities. The electroretinogram was in favor of cone dystrophy. Computed tomography showed one case of calcifications of the basal ganglia and
cerebral atrophy
. The karyotypes of the four brothers and the mother were normal. We discuss the ocular symptoms and the etiopathogenesis of this syndrome.
...
PMID:[Cockayne's syndrome with unusual retinal involvement (report of one family)]. 1066 Jun 49
A heterogeneous group of patients with congenital muscular dystrophy associated with clinical or radiologic central nervous system involvement other than the severe classic form with merosin deficiency, muscle-eye-brain disease, and Walker-Warburg syndrome is described. A probable hereditary or familial occurrence could be suggested in all patients. One merosin-positive patient presented severe motor incapacity and
cerebral atrophy
without any clinical manifestation of central nervous system involvement. A second patient, also merosin-positive, had moderate motor and mental handicap, and epilepsy with no changes in neuroimaging. A third patient, found to have partial merosin deficiency by muscle biopsy, manifested severe psychomotor retardation and
cerebral atrophy
with foci of abnormal white-matter signal on magnetic resonance imaging. Finally, two merosin-positive siblings with microcephaly,
mental retardation
, and an incapacitating progressive neuromuscular course, exhibited cataracts without defects of neuronal migration or brain malformation. This report emphasizes the broad clinical spectrum and heterogeneity of merosin-positive congenital muscular dystrophy with associated central nervous system involvement, and illustrates the importance of further studies on clinical, immunohistochemical, and genetic grounds for identifying new subsets of congenital muscular dystrophy.
...
PMID:Heterogeneity of classic congenital muscular dystrophy with involvement of the central nervous system: report of five atypical cases. 1075 73
Familial hemiplegic migraine is caused by CACNA1A missense mutations in 50% of families, including all families with cerebellar ataxia. A patient with healthy parents, who experienced prolonged attacks of migraine with hemiplegia, coma, and seizures, is reported. The patient also had
mental retardation
, permanent cerebellar ataxia with cerebellar atrophy, and right-sided
brain atrophy
. This patient carried a de novo Tyr 1385 Cys mutation in the CACNA1A gene and illustrates a novel phenotype associated with CACNA1A mutations.
...
PMID:CACNA1A gene de novo mutation causing hemiplegic migraine, coma, and cerebellar atrophy. 1106 Dec 67
Defects in mitochondrial enzymes, such as pyruvate dehydrogenase and cytochrome oxidase, cause hereditary disorders which lead to modifications in cellular pH due to the accumulation of pyruvate and lactic acid. Mitochondrial diseases include severe neonatal diseases and less severe forms of adult diseases. We report the case of lactic acidosis in a newborn girl who was delivered at 36 weeks of gestation and who died 3 months after birth. Her family history revealed a relative with tetraparesis and
mental retardation
. Her clinical findings, such as tonic-clonic convulsions and accumulation of pyruvate and lactic acid in blood, urine and cerebrospinal fluid, were refractory to treatment and developed soon after birth. Ultrasound scans of the brain some days before death revealed
cerebral atrophy
with ventricular dilatation and thinning of the corpus callosum and septum pellucidum. The clinical diagnosis of metabolic lactic acidosis was confirmed by macroscopic, microscopic and ultrastructural findings seen at autopsy. On macroscopic examination, the heart was hypertrophic, and the brain was atrophic with ventricular dilatation and thinning of corpus callosum. Small cystic lesions were present in the basal ganglia. On microscopic examination, the latter were characterized by loss of neurons, gliosis and capillary proliferation. Ultrastructural examination of the heart and skeletal muscle showed lysis of myofibrils, mitochondrial pleomorphism and hyperplasia, and crystalline inclusion in mitochondria and in the matrix compartment. In reporting this case, we emphasize the importance of accurate postmortem examination and clinical data for the diagnosis of metabolic lactic acidosis.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of neonatal lactic acidosis]. 1129 18
We reported three siblings with complicated hereditary spastic paraplegia. The striking features in these patients were characterized by early onset of gait disturbance,
mental deficiency
, and dystonia. The most likely diagnosis was Mast syndrome. Patient 1: A 44 years-old woman. She first developed gait disturbances at age of 8. She was admitted in our hospital because of progressive spastic paraplegia. Neurological examination revealed
mental deficiency
, saccadic pursuit eye movement, speech disturbance of cerebellar type, ataxia, and spastic paraplegia. She showed also dystonia in the face, tongue, and trunk. MRI showed cerebellar atrophy. Patient 2: A 51 years-old brother of the patient 1. He had mentally retarded. Late teens he developed gait disturbance. Gradually he manifested spastic paraplegia, dysarthria, dysphasia,
mental deficiency
, and ataxia. He also showed incontinence of urine and feces. Then he became bedridden, apathetic, and showed forced crying. MRI showed diffuse
brain atrophy
. Patient 3: A 48 year-old woman. This woman, a sister of the patient 1, showed progressive gait disturbance and dysarthria. She also developed incontinence, apathy, and dystonia. She became bedridden, responding to simple questions with only occasional single-word answers. Her speech was slurred, and spastic paraplegia was noted. MRI showed diffuse
brain atrophy
including marked atrophy of the cerebellum.
...
PMID:[A family of hereditary spastic paraplegia with dementia, ataxia, and dystonia]. 1199 89
Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCLs) are neurodegenerative storage diseases characterized by
mental retardation
, visual failure, and
brain atrophy
as well as accumulation of storage material in multiple cell types. The diseases are caused by mutations in the ubiquitously expressed genes, of which six are known. Herein, we report that three NCL disease forms with similar tissue pathology are connected at the molecular level: CLN5 polypeptides directly interact with the CLN2 and CLN3 proteins based on coimmunoprecipitation and in vitro binding assays. Furthermore, disease mutations in CLN5 abolished interaction with CLN2, while not affecting association with CLN3. The molecular characterization of CLN5 revealed that it was synthesized as four precursor forms, due to usage of alternative initiator methionines in translation. All forms were targeted to lysosomes and the longest form, translated from the first potential methionine, was associated with membranes. Interactions between CLN polypeptides were shown to occur with this longest, membrane-bound form of CLN5. Both intracellular targeting and posttranslational glycosylation of the polypeptides carrying human disease mutations were similar to wild-type CLN5.
...
PMID:Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses are connected at molecular level: interaction of CLN5 protein with CLN2 and CLN3. 1213 79
A neurological syndrome involving progressive action tremor with ataxia, cognitive decline and generalized
brain atrophy
has been described recently in some adult males with pre-mutation alleles of the fragile X syndrome (FXS) fragile X
mental retardation
gene (FMR1). Neurohistological studies have now been performed on the brains of four elderly premutation carriers, not reported previously, who displayed the neurological phenotype. Eosinophilic, intranuclear inclusions were present in both neuronal and astrocytic nuclei of the cortex in all four individuals. Systematic analysis of the brains of two of these carriers demonstrated the presence of the intranuclear inclusions throughout the cerebrum and brainstem, being most numerous in the hippocampal formation. The cerebellum displayed marked dropout of Purkinje cells, Purkinje axonal torpedoes and Bergmann gliosis. Intranuclear inclusions were absent from Purkinje cells, although they were present in a small number of neurones in the dentate nucleus and diffusely in cerebellar astrocytes. The presence of inclusions in the brains of all four FXS carriers with the neurological findings provides further support for a unique clinical entity associated with pre-mutation FMR1 alleles. The origin of the inclusions is unknown, although elevated FMR1 mRNA levels in these pre-mutation carriers may lead to the neuropathological changes.
...
PMID:Neuronal intranuclear inclusions in a new cerebellar tremor/ataxia syndrome among fragile X carriers. 1213 67
Infants with Down syndrome are known to have a high frequency of birth defects, particularly cardiac and gastrointestinal defects. Mental retardation of different degrees is common, but accompanying central nervous system malformations are rare. We report a boy born spontaneously in the 37th postconceptional week with multiple malformations: microcephaly, hypertelorism, blepharophimosis, medial cleft palate, micrognathia, omphalocele, and pathologic palmar and plantar creases. Cardial sonography revealed a ventricular septal defect and mild pulmonary stenosis. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a general but infratentorial stressed
brain atrophy
with widening of the inner and outer cerebrospinal fluid spaces and dysplasia of the corpus callosum. Chromosomal analysis showed a free trisomy 21. The boy had muscular hypotonia and developed severe motor and
mental retardation
, accompanied by microsomia and generalized epileptic seizures. At age 8 months, he died of sudden nocturnal respiratory and cardiac failure. The peculiarity of this case is the combination of Down syndrome with midline developmental defects (callosal dysplasia, medial cleft palate, omphalocele) accompanied by severe malformative encephalopathy. There are no previous reports of this combination, but there are genetic links between Down syndrome and midline defects concerning the Drosophila single-minded (sim) gene. The expression pattern of the human sim corresponding gene suggests that it might be involved in the pathogenesis of midline defects in Down syndrome.
...
PMID:Midline developmental anomalies in Down syndrome. 1217 71
We evaluated six children in whom MR imaging showed unilateral cerebral polymicrogyria associated with ipsilateral
cerebral atrophy
and ipsilateral brain stem atrophy. The aim of this study was to clarify whether this disorder based on neuroimaging constitutes a new homogeneous clinical entity. The subjects were six children whose ages at the time of MR imaging ranged from 8 months to 11 years. Their clinical and MR features were analyzed. All of the children were born between 38 and 42 weeks gestation, without any significant perinatal events. Spastic hemiplegia and epilepsy were observed in all of the patients, and
mental retardation
was observed in four. The MR findings included unilateral cerebral polymicrogyria associated with ipsilateral cerebral hemiatrophy and ipsilateral brain stem atrophy in all patients. The ipsilateral sylvian fissure was hypoplastic in four patients. These patients showed relatively homogeneous clinical and neuroimaging features. Although the additional clinical features varied according to the site and the extent affected by the polymicrogyria, this disorder could constitute a new relatively homogeneous clinical entity.
...
PMID:Unilateral cerebral polymicrogyria with ipsilateral cerebral hemiatrophy. 1227 97
Rett syndrome is a progressive, usually sporadic and rarely familial, disabling neurodevelopmental disorder with onset in early childhood presenting clinically with
mental retardation
, behavioral changes, late movement disturbances, loss of speech and hand skills, ataxia, apraxia, irregular breathing with hyperventilation while awake, and frequent seizures. It occurs almost exclusively in females with an estimated prevalence of 1 in 10-22000 births and is considered a manifestation of defective brain maturation caused by dominant mutation of the MeCP2 gene encoding the transcriptional repressor methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 related to the Xq28 locus. Although many different mutations of this protein are being studied in humans and in mice, the molecular pathogenesis of this disorder remains unclear. Electroencephalography is abnormal in the final stages of the syndrome. Neuroimaging showing
brain atrophy
may be required for differential diagnosis that includes neurodegenerative and metabolic disorders. Neuropathology shows decreased brain growth and reduced size of individual neurons, with thinned dendrites in some cortical layers and abnormalities in substantia nigra (decreased neuromelanin content), suggestive of deficient synaptogenic development, probably starting before birth. Neurometabolic changes include reduced levels of dopamine, serotonin, noradrenalin, choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), nerve growth factors, endorphines, glutamate, and other amino acids and their receptor levels in brain. Current treatment includes symptomatic, anticonvulsive and physiotherapy.
...
PMID:Rett Syndrome -- an update. 1276 63
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