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)

We had the opportunity to examine eight individuals in four generations of a family with dominant CHARGE association. In three generations there were five affected individuals. The 25-year old male proband had coloboma of the iris, retina and optic disc, mental retardation, hypogonadism, malformed ears, and mixed hearing loss. His 19-year old sister had colobomas of the retina, choroid, and disc, mental retardation and malformed ears. The mother of these two individuals had coloboma of the retina, choroid, and optic disc, dull mentality, and mixed hearing loss. The proband's maternal grandmother had peripapillary staphylomatous changes of the disc, mixed hearing loss, and malformed protruding ears. The proband's maternal uncle had mental retardation, hypogonadism, mixed hearing loss, protruding ears, but no colobomas. All of the affected individuals had a distinct configuration to the midface, including malar hypoplasia, prominent nasal columnella and a long nasal philtrum. The inheritance of the CHARGE association in this family would appear to be autosomal dominant. However, as the males have not reproduced, it is not possible to rule out X-linked dominant inheritance.
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PMID:Dominant CHARGE association. 393 23

Precocious puberty (PP) and intellectual handicap were present in 3 males in 2 generations of a Western Australian family. The 2 obligate carrier women were of normal intelligence but were grossly obese; one died of a cardiomyopathy at 55 years. The youngest affected male was found to have PP at 3 years. His mother was then pregnant, and because of her family history, was aware of the risk to have an affected male. Her mother had given birth to 2 sons with PP. By school age both of these males were mildly intellectually handicapped and this later became moderate. Apart from these 3 affected males, the 2 carriers lost 6 of their other 8 offspring, leaving only one normal woman and her unaffected son. The Fragile X test was negative on all males. This appears to be a new X-linked mental retardation syndrome, and a condition different from true idiopathic PP, or familial PP affecting both sexes, or PP with X-linked dominant inheritance.
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PMID:X-linked intellectual handicap and precocious puberty with obesity in carrier females. 395 42

To clarify the effects of perinatal anoxia on the subsequent amino acid metabolism in the brain of children, free amino acid levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were determined in 15 children diagnosed as having cerebral palsy and/or mental retardation with perinatal anoxia, and 58 control children without anoxia, aged from 4 days to 12 yrs. There was no significant difference in total amino acid levels between anoxic children and the controls. In the controls, the Gln level in CSF was high, Arg, Asp and Glu levels in CSF were almost the same during infancy and childhood, and the levels of Orn, Lys, His, Tau, Thr, Ser, Asn, Gly, Ala, Val, Met, Ile, Leu, Tyr and Phe in CSF decreased with age until pre-school age. In the newborns and infants among the anoxic children, the levels of most free amino acids in CSF were relatively high compared with those of the controls and, except Glu and Gln, decreased with age during infancy. The Orn, His, Gly, Tyr and Phe levels in CSF of anoxic children were lower than those of the controls in older infants. These results suggest that perinatal anoxia affected free amino acid patterns in CSF of newborns and infants and that the subsequent disturbance of amino acid metabolism in their brains remained after birth.
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PMID:The effect of perinatal anoxia on amino acid metabolism in the developing brain. Part II: The effect of perinatal anoxia on the free amino acid patterns in CSF of infants and children. 406 76

An infant who died with neurological abnormalities, mental retardation, and dislocated ocular lenses excreted in his urine abnormally large amounts of S-sulfo-L-cysteine, sulfite, and thiosulfate and virtulally no inorganic sutlfate. The present report establishes the occurrence of an ezymatic defect in this infant. His liver, brain, and kidney specifically lacked sulfite oxidase activity. Deficiency of sulfite oxidase, which has not apparently been described in man, provides a reasonable explanation for the abnormalities in this infant.
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PMID:Sulfite oxidase deficiency in man: demonstration of the enzymatic defect. 602 18

Forty-two articles published between 1961 and 1977 describing 43 probands and 26 siblings with histidinaemia were used for the retrospective study. Our objective was to describe the apparent impact of the mutation on development and health in human histidinaemia. The findings were similar to those of an earlier survey (Popkin et al., 1974). Most probands (79%) had a disadaptive CNS phenotype (mental retardation, impaired speech, seizures, aberrant behaviour, and/or learning disorder); half the histidinaemic siblings had a similar phenotype. The modal IQ score was 70; age at recognition of symptoms (CNS phenotype) varied from 1 month to 16 y (modal age 2 1/2 y). There was no correlation between blood histidine (reported values) and occurrence of severity of CNS phenotype. Thirty per cent of histidinaemia subjects, for whom the perinatal history was described, had an abnormal experience. Reported cases with the CNS phenotype apparently represent a very small fraction (about 1%) of all subjects with histidinaemia; this implies that the histidinaemia phenotype is not disadaptive in man.
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PMID:Histidinaemia. Part II: Impact; a retrospective study. 641 Jan 18

Two autopsy cases of congenital muscular dystrophy of Fukuyama type (F-CMD) were described. The first case was diagnosed clinically and pathologically as its typical case. Neither his family history nor the history of his prenatal period were contributory. He had suffered from muscle weakness and atrophy since his birth. Serum CPK was markedly elevated. EMG and muscle biopsy proved dystrophic changes of the skeletal muscles. In addition, he manifested mental retardation and attacks of convulsion. EEG failed to elicit remarkable changes, but PEG represented ventricular dilatation. He died of respiratory insufficiency at age 12. His postmortem examination showed variegated anomalies in the nervous system. Extensive micropolygyria was present in the cerebrum and cerebellum accompanied by adhesions between the bilateral cerebral hemispheres. Assymmetry of the longitudinal fibers was pointed out in the pontine base. Anterior horn cells were atrophic and moderately depopulated. On the other hand, the second patient was an atypical F-CMD case in symptoms, signs and pathology. His grand-mothers on both father's and mother's sides wee first cousins. His three siblings showed no similar disorders. His mother developed slight gestational toxicosis in the sixth and seventh months of pregnancy. His muscle weakness, contracture of the bilateral hip-joints and clubfoot had been observed since his birth. Physical and neurological examinations at age 6 showed deformity of the skull, myopathic face, macroglossia, high-arched palate, pigeon chest, scoliosis of the thoracic spine. In addition, generalized muscular atrophy, hypotonia and areflexia were recognized. Pseudohypertrophy of the muscles was absent. Sensation was intact to all modalities. Serum CPK and LDH were moderately increased.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[2 autopsy cases of congenital muscular dystrophy of Fukuyama type--a typical and an atypical cases]. 652 23

We report on a family with 4 affected males in 3 generations with a previously unreported X-linked mental retardation/multiple congenital anomaly (XLMR/MCA) syndrome. The propositus was a 7-year-old Latin American moderately retarded male with: prenatal and postnatal overgrowth; short, broad upturned nose; large mouth; midline groove of tongue, lower alveolar ridge and lower lip; submucous cleft palate; supernumerary nipples; 13 ribs; Meckel's diverticulum; intestinal malrotation; coccygeal skin tag and bony appendage; hypoplastic index fingernails; postaxial polydactyly of the right hand, bilateral syndactyly of 2nd and 3rd fingers; and tibial clinodactyly of 2nd toes. His sister's son, a premature infant who died at 4 months, had nearly identical manifestations. The propositus and his nephew had normal chromosomes. A brother and son of the sister of the mother of the propositus were similarly affected and both died in the newborn period. The mother of the propositus had a large mouth, coccygeal skin tag and bony appendage, and hypoplastic index fingernails. This distinct mental retardation/multiple congenital anomaly syndrome is added to the growing list of presently known X-linked MCA/MR syndromes.
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PMID:A new X-linked mental retardation-overgrowth syndrome. 653 55

A 14-year-old boy is described with hypogonadism, ichthyosis and mental retardation. His karyotype was 46,Y, der(X),t(X;)(p22;q11). His mother's karyotype was 46,X,der(X),t(X;Y)(p22;q11). Thus the son is nullisomic for the region Xp22 leads to pter and the mother is monosomic for the same region. The steroid sulfatase activity in this boy is discussed in relationship to the enzyme's locus on the X chromosome and the manifestation of ichthyosis.
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PMID:A familial X/Y translocation in a boy with ichthyosis, hypogonadism and mental retardation. 665 48

A 5 1/2-year-old Japanese boy with a Weaver-like syndrome is reported. In addition to pre- and post-natal overgrowth, mental retardation, an unusual craniofacial appearance and other abnormalities characteristic of the Weaver syndrome, he had several clinical features not described in this syndrome. These unusual features included mongoloid slanting of the palpebral fissures, cleft lip, accessory nipples, pectus excavatum, a bifid xyphoid process, irregularly shaped vertebral bodies, inflexible right thumb, clinodactyly of the fifth fingers, abnormal dermatoglyphic patterns and deep plantar furrows. His carpal bone age corresponded to his chronological age, while the tubular bone age was accelerated.
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PMID:A Weaver-like syndrome in a Japanese boy. 670 43

We report on 2 boys, the sons of sisters, and their mother's brother who have a new, X-linked multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome. The propositus was a 16-month-old caucasian male with 1) mental retardation, 2) congenital microcephaly, 3) postnatal growth deficiency, 4) ridged metopic suture with narrow bifrontal diameter, 5) upslanted palpebral fissures with persistent epicanthal folds, strabismus, and lacrimal duct obstruction, 6) narrow palate, 7) macrodontia, 8) anteverted ears, 9) atrial septal defect, 10) dry brittle scalp hair and 11) cutis marmorata. His chromosomes were normal. His cousin and uncle were similarly affected. This distinctive MCA/MR syndrome is added to the list of X-linked malformation syndromes known at the present time.
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PMID:A new X-linked multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation syndrome. 671 4


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