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)

Liver fibrocystic disease (LFCD), characterized by dilatation of the intrahepatic bile ducts and variable degree of fibrosis, can be present alone or as part of many syndromes, such as Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS), Meckel syndrome, Jeune asphyxiating thoracic dysplasia, and Fraser-Jequier-Chen syndrome. We report two cases of LFCD and polydactyly with features similar, but not diagnostic of, BBS. Patient 1 was an 18-month-old boy with mental retardation, polydactyly, chronic renal failure, convergent strabismus, and hepatic fibrosis. Patient 2 was a male neonate with LFCD and polydactyly. Their manifestations could not be diagnosed as any of the previous mentioned entities. Difficulties in the early diagnosis of BBS have been previously reported and this could explain the clinical variability and heterogeneity of manifestations at the time of diagnosis. On the other hand, the existence of liver abnormalities in association with BBS has been previously described, but is rare. Our patients' malformations might represent a new entity where autosomal recessive inheritance is probable, but other patterns cannot be ruled out.
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PMID:Liver fibrocystic disease and polydactyly: proposal of a new syndrome. 1134 30

Fraser syndrome is characterised by cryptophthalmos, cutaneous syndactyly, malformations of the larynx and genitourinary tract, craniofacial dysmorphism, orofacial clefting, mental retardation, and musculoskeletal anomalies. The inheritance is autosomal recessive. No diagnostic cytogenetic abnormalities have been documented in affected patients, and no molecular genetic studies have been reported. We have reviewed 117 cases diagnosed as Fraser syndrome or cryptophthalmos published since the comprehensive review of Thomas et al in 1986 in order to validate the published diagnostic criteria and to delineate the phenotype associated with this syndrome. Our series showed more females (57/117) than males and consanguinity was present in 29/119 (24.8%). Eighty-eight patients satisfied the diagnostic criteria for Fraser syndrome (75%). Cryptophthalmos was present in 103/117 (88%), syndactyly in 72/117 (61.5%), and ambiguous genitalia in 20/117 (17.1%). Ear malformations were recorded in 69/117 (59%), and renal agenesis in 53/117 (45.3%). Use of the published diagnostic criteria excluded several patients with cryptophthalmos and one or more physical feature(s) consistent with Fraser syndrome. The frequency of additional anomalies in our series was also higher than previously reported (for example, imperforate anus or anal stenosis were found in 34/117 (29%) compared with 2/124 (2%) in the series of Thomas et al (1986) and choanal stenosis or atresia was present in 7/117 (6%) compared to 0/124. These findings emphasise the clinical variability associated with Fraser syndrome and support genetic heterogeneity of the syndrome. We also noted patterns of anomalies (for example, bicornuate uterus with imperforate anus or anal stenosis and renal malformations) that are found in other syndromes and associations without cryptophthalmos, suggesting that common modifier genes may explain some of the phenotypic variation in Fraser syndrome.
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PMID:Fraser syndrome and cryptophthalmos: review of the diagnostic criteria and evidence for phenotypic modules in complex malformation syndromes. 1220 4

A seven-year-old girl was referred to our clinic with absent eyelids and a mass which was gradually increasing in size from the right orbit. The child was diagnosed to have Fraser syndrome (cryptophthalmos, abnormal genitalia, mental deficiency, renal agenesis and abnormal ears). On examination, there was cryptophthalmos and a cystic swelling arising from the right orbit. The cyst was removed. On gross examination, there was a posterior eyeball with normal optic nerve. Placed in the anterior part of the eyeball was a cyst measuring about 2 cm in diameter filled with a yellow-coloured fluid. The cavity of the eyeball was communicating with the cyst. The cyst wall was lined by a single layer of epithelium. The posterior eyeball had well developed sclera, choroid, retina and optic nerve. There have been many reports of cryptophthalmos in Fraser syndrome. The most common eye deformity described with cryptophthalmos is microphthalmia or anophthalmia. To the author's knowledge, there is one other report of cystic eyeball with cryptophthalmos in the literature. The cyst seems to be due to a surface ectodermal anomaly, rather than a neuro-ectodermal anomaly where there is failure of invagination of the primary optic cup during development. The cyst wall in those cases has inverted retinal elements. In our case, differentiation of retinal elements was present in the posterior eyeball. The abnormality seemed to lie in the derivatives of surface ectoderm, namely the eyelids and the anterior segment structures.
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PMID:Congenital orbito-palpebral cyst in a case of Fraser syndrome. 1468 2

We describe a 20-year-old 46,XY woman, with clinical findings of Fraser syndrome and three mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations of Leber hereditary optic neuropathy. The patient had microphthalmia, blindness, widely spaced nipples, bifid ureter, syndactyly of the toes, and mental retardation. Sonography showed the presence of a uterus and intra-abdominal gonads. The proband was screened for mtDNA mutations because of chronic gastrointestinal pseudo-obstruction, urinary tract dysmotility, seizures, mental retardation and persistent macrocytosis, as well as the intermittent elevation of methylmalonic acid. Analysis of point mutations by multiplex polymerase chain reaction and allele-specific oligonucleotide dot-blot hybridization revealed three homoplasmic mtDNA mutations, T14484C, T4216C, and T3394C. This represents a unique case with sex reversal, Fraser-like syndrome, and mitochondrial disease.
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PMID:Mitochondrial DNA mutations in a patient with sex reversal and clinical features consistent with Fraser syndrome. 1569 63

Cryptophthalmos may be partial or complete, unilateral or bilateral, apparently nonsyndromal or syndromal. A recent study of 2 stillborn infants at the University of Utah prompted an analysis of the developmental aspects of the syndromal form (Fraser syndrome). We conclude that, per se, cryptophthalmos is a developmental field defect on the basis of heterogeneity (autosomal dominant and recessive forms) and phylogeneity (occurrence also in the pheasant, rabbit, pigeon, dog, and mouse). In humans this autosomal recessive disorder maps to 4q21, is homologous to the bleb (bl/bl) mouse, and is due to mutations in the FRAS1 gene that codes for a 4007 amino acid protein 85% identical to the Fras1 gene of the bleb mouse. Commonest anomalies in humans are cryptophthalmos, cutaneous syndactyly of digits, abnormal ears and genitalia, renal agenesis, and congenital heart defects. Almost half of affected infants are stillborn or die in infancy, and mental retardation is common. The pathogenesis evidently involves abnormal epithelial integrity during prenatal life. Older (mostly German) publications, some dating to the 19th century, provide a fascinating historical insight into the process of syndrome delineation.
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PMID:Prenatal death in Fraser syndrome. 1906 28

Fraser syndrome (OMIM 219000) is a rare, autosomal recessive condition with classical features of cryptophthalmos, syndactyly, ambiguous genitalia, laryngeal, and genitourinary malformations, oral clefting and mental retardation. Mutations causing loss of function of the FRAS1 gene have been demonstrated in five patients with Fraser syndrome. However, no phenotype-genotype correlation was established and there was evidence for genetic heterogeneity. Fraser syndrome is rare and the FRAS1 gene has 75 exons, complicating mutation screening in affected patients. We have screened two patients who fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for Fraser syndrome and three patients with related phenotypes (two patients with Manitoba oculotrichoanal syndrome and one patient with unilateral cryptophthalmos and labial fusion) for mutations in FRAS1 to increase the molecular genetic data in patients with Fraser syndrome and related conditions. We report two new mutations in a patient with Fraser syndrome, a frameshift mutation and a deletion of two amino acids that we consider pathogenic as both alter the NG2-like domain of the protein. Although we are still unable to clarify a phenotype-genotype relationship in Fraser syndrome, our data add to the list of mutations associated with this syndrome.
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PMID:Mutation analysis of the FRAS1 gene demonstrates new mutations in a propositus with Fraser syndrome. 1689 41

Fraser syndrome (OMIM 219000) is a rare, autosomal recessive disorder characterized by cryptophthalmos, cutanaeous syndactyly, malformations of the larynx and genitourinary tract, craniofacial dysmorphism, orofacial clefting, mental retardation and musculoskeletal anomalies. There is marked interfamilial clinical heterogeneity. However, there is strong phenotypic similarity and concordance of the degree of severity of the disease within a family. We report a family with two cases of Fraser syndrome with marked clinical heterogeneity. One case had lethal phenotype with bilateral renal agenesis, while the other had mild phenotype with normal kidneys. It has not been reported before and highlights the importance of careful screening of pregnancies in families with Fraser syndrome.
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PMID:Intrafamilial variability in Fraser syndrome. 1754 4

Fraser syndrome is an autosomal recessive congenital malformation syndrome characterized by cryptophthalmos, syndactyly, and urogenital defects. We studied the clinical features in 59 affected individuals from 40 families (25 consanguineous), and compared our findings to data from previous reviews. We found a higher frequency of abnormalities of the skull, larynx, umbilicus, urinary tract, and anus in our series of patients, and mental retardation and cleft lip with or without cleft palate were observed less frequently than previously reported. Clinical features in probands and sibs were remarkably similar. As can be expected prenatally diagnosed patients had more manifestations that gave rise to a pathological amount of amniotic fluid. Otherwise patients diagnosed before and after birth had similar frequencies of symptoms. Based on the present results we suggest an adaptation of diagnostic criteria for FS, including adding airway tract and urinary tract anomalies as major criteria. The specificity of the proposed diagnostic criteria was evaluated using the London Medical Database as a search tool.
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PMID:Fraser syndrome: a clinical study of 59 cases and evaluation of diagnostic criteria. 1800 Sep 68

Fraser syndrome is a rare, autosomal recessive condition with classical features of cryptophthalmos, syndactyly, ambiguous genitalia, genitourinary mal-formations and mental retardation. We report a family with affected child where the pregnant woman was referred at 24 weeks of gestation for termination of pregnancy. The aborted fetus showed typical findings suggestive of Fraser syndrome.
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PMID:Fraser syndrome: recurrence in a family. 1817 49

Fraser syndrome is characterized by cryptophthalmos, cutaneous syndactyly, malformations of the larynx and genitourinary tract, craniofacial dysmorphism, orofacial clefting, mental retardation, and musculoskeletal anomalies. We report a case of a two day old neonate who presented with features suggestive of the diagnosis of Fraser syndrome. This child also had partial anomalous pulmonary venous connection and congenital hypo-thyroidism.
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PMID:Fraser syndrome with partial anomalous pulmonary venous connection. 1859 43


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