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)

The congenital muscular dystrophies (CMDs) are a heterogeneous group of disorders. Among these, the laminin alpha 2 chain 'merosin' deficient CMD is caused by mutations of the LAMA2 gene on chr 6q2 and Fukuyama CMD is linked to chr 9q31. We report a 7-year-old boy who was born to consanguineous healthy parents. His motor and mental development were slow. Creatine kinase (CK) was elevated (2.100 U/l), and the muscle biopsy was dystrophic. He sat unsupported at 12 months and took his first steps at 3 years of age. At 6 years of age he could walk up to 500 m. He was mentally retarded and spoke single words only. At 1 year, MR imaging of the brain showed abnormal increased periventricular T2-signal, consistent with dysmyelination as well as pontocerebellar hypoplasia and several cerebellar cysts. The pattern of gyration was normal. Follow-up at 4 years showed normalization of the previously abnormal periventricular T2-signal. Immunohistochemical analysis of the skeletal muscle showed normal expression of laminin alpha 2 for a C-terminal antibody and antibodies to the 300 and 150 kDa fragments, as well as of laminins alpha 5, beta 1, beta 2 and gamma 1. The boy has two healthy younger brothers. Linkage analysis excluded the candidate loci on chromosomes 6q2 and 9q31. As such, the patient's data are suggestive of a new form of laminin alpha 2 positive CMD characterized by transient brain dysmyelination, pontocerebellar hypoplasia and mental retardation.
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PMID:Merosin-positive congenital muscular dystrophy with transient brain dysmyelination, pontocerebellar hypoplasia and mental retardation. 1022 Aug 64

When I was in medical school, Douglas Power Murphy, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, told us of his inexpensive, simple study of "microcephaly" and mental retardation in newborn infants whose mothers had received therapeutic radiation early in pregnancy. His review of the literature and mail inquiry of other obstetrics centers in the United States revealed 14 published cases (Murphy, '28) and 16 unpublished (Goldstein and Murphy, '29). Here am I, 52 years later, still updating his findings.
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PMID:Discussion: severe mental retardation and cancer among atomic bomb survivors exposed in utero. 1033 25

An 11-year-old boy affected by mental retardation and seizures demonstrates congenital heart defect, many dysmorphic features and dry skin. His hair is sparse over the vertex with alopecia of the eyebrows and eyelashes. There are horny small papules evident in those areas. The diagnosis of cardiofaciocutaneous syndrome has been made. The relationship between cardiofaciocutaneous and Noonan syndrome is discussed.
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PMID:Cardiofaciocutaneous (CFC) syndrome. 1033 26

The patient was a 61-year-old man who suffered from gait disturbance since childhood. He also had mental retardation. Gait disturbance was slowly progressive. His mother, sister, brother and son of his sister suffered from gait disturbance. On neurological examination, he showed mental retardation, optic nerve atrophy and neural deafness. He also showed severe muscle atrophy and weakness of bilateral lower limbs associated with pes cavus. Muscle tonus of lower limbs and patellar tendon reflex were increased bilaterally. Achilles tendon reflex was absent. Babinski and Chaddock signs were positive. Superficial and deep sensations were almost normal. There were no cerebellar signs. Blood chemistry was normal. On nerve conduction studies, motor nerve conduction velocity of the upper limbs was normal and that of the posterior tibial nerve was decreased; right 36.0m/sec, left 29.7m/sec. Sensory nerve conduction velocity of the median nerve was slightly decreased; right 36.5m/sec, left 45.2m/sec and sural nerve did not respond to electric stimuli. On sural nerve biopsy, the density of myelinated fibers was severely decreased. Onion bulb formation was not observed. We classified this case as hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy (HMSN) type II based on nerve conduction studies and findings from sural nerve biopsy. HMSN with pyramidal tract sign has been classified as type V and HMSN with optic nerve atrophy as type VI. This case had characteristic symptoms as type V and VI. Histopathological findings of HMSN type V and VI have not been established yet. This case might provide an important clue for classification of HMSN.
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PMID:[A case of hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy with pyramidal tract sign, optic nerve atrophy and mental retardation]. 1034 45

A 14-year-old male was referred for evaluation of mental retardation with short stature and dysmorphic features. His karyotype was 46,XY,der(14)t(5;14)(q33;p12)pat, resulting in a pure partial 5q33-q35 trisomy due to the adjacent-1 segregation of a paternal balanced translocation. Paternal blood karyotype revealed a balanced translocation t(5;14)(q33;p12) retaining Ag-Nors. To date, only two cases of pure partial 5q trisomies spanning this region have been reported. Analysis of these cases and the one we report does not allow the delineation of a specific phenotype.
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PMID:Pure partial trisomy 5q33-->5q35 resulting from the adjacent-1 segregation of a paternal (5;14)(q33;p12) translocation. 1052 60

The FRAXE fragile site, 600 kb distal to the more common FRAXA, has been reported to be expressed in subjects with mild non-syndromal mental retardation (MR). Amplification of more than 200 GCC repeats, associated with methylation of the adjacent CpG island at Xq28, leads to the expression of the fragile site. In 1996 a large gene, FMR2, transcribed distally from the CpG island and downregulated by repeat expansion and methylation, was identified. Among 232 mentally retarded patients, tested FRAXA negative, we identified an Italian family segregating a hypermethylated expansion at the FRAXE locus in two dizygotic twin brothers, their sister and their mother. The index case was referred at 23 years of age with severe MR, epilepsy, a dysmorphic face with a high arched palate, marfanoid habitus and hyperreflexia of the lower limbs. His brother was referred to as normal and psychometric tests confirmed he is not mentally retarded. All members of the family underwent FRAXE molecular analysis, after cytogenetic expression of the fraX site and negative FRAXA test. Interestingly, an expansion and a hypermethylation at the FRAXE locus were found in all of them. Fibroblasts from the clinically normal brother were assayed for FMR2 expression and the transcription of the gene was found to be silenced. The presence of a phenotypically normal male with absent FMR2 expression in fibroblasts suggests that the relationship between the FRAXE mutation, FMR2 expression and MR needs to be further investigated.
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PMID:FRAXE mutation in a mentally retarded subject and in his phenotypically normal twin brother. 1078 Jul 79

Alstrom syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive disease; less than 60 cases have been reported. No Chinese patient with this disease has been reported previously in the literature. Here, we describe an 11-year-old Chinese boy with this condition. His elder sister also had Alstrom syndrome, and his father had non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Both siblings had degenerative retinopathy, obesity, mental retardation, perceptive hearing loss, short stature, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, nephropathy, hyperlipidemia, acanthosis nigricans, and hepatic dysfunction. The boy also developed acute lymphoblastic leukemia, which was confirmed by cytochemistry and immunophenotyping findings. He received chemotherapy and radiotherapy for the malignancy. The present case suggests that acute lymphoblastic leukemia may be coincident with or may be a previously undescribed systemic manifestation of Alstrom syndrome.
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PMID:Acute lymphoblastic leukemia in one of two siblings with Alstrom syndrome. 1106 Oct 78

We report a 53-year-old Japanese male with a 47,XXX karyotype. His clinical features included hypoplastic scrotal testes (4 ml bilaterally), normally formed small penis (3.8 cm), relatively poor pubic hair development (Tanner stage 3), gynecomastia, age-appropriate male height (159.1 cm), and mental retardation (verbal IQ of 56). Serum testosterone was markedly reduced (0.6 nmol/L). A needle biopsy showed severe testicular degeneration. FISH analysis revealed complex mosaicism consisting of (1) 47,XXX cells with a single copy of SRY (n = 177), two copies of SRY (n = 3), and no SRY (n = 1); (2) 46,XX cells with a single copy of SRY (n = 9) and no SRY (n = 3); (3) 45,X cells with no SRY (n = 5); and (4) 48,XXXX cells with a single copy of SRY (n = 1) and two copies of SRY (n = 1). PCR analysis showed the presence of Yp portion with the breakpoint between DYS264 and AMELY. Microsatellite analysis demonstrated three alleles for DMD and AR. X-inactivation analysis for the methylation status of the AR gene showed random inactivation of the three X chromosomes. The results suggest that this 47,XXX male has resulted from abnormal X-Y interchange during paternal meiosis and X-X nondisjunction during maternal meiosis. Complex mosaicism may be due to the age-related increase in mitotic nondisjunction which is prone to occur in rapidly dividing lymphocytes and to the presence of two randomly inactivated X chromosomes which may behave asynchronously during mitosis, and clinical features of this male would primarily be explained by the genetic information on the SRY (+) der(X) chromosome and his advanced age.
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PMID:47,XXX male: A clinical and molecular study. 1117 81

A case of a 5-year-old boy with non-24 hour sleep-wake syndrome and mental retardation is reported. His free-running sleep-wake rhythm was remarkably improved by the oral administration of melatonin. The circadian variation in melatonin secretion was extremely low, and circadian rhythm of cortisol secretion was noted. It was speculated that his non-24 hour sleep-wake syndrome was due to a congenital deficiency of melatonin secretion, and supplemental melatonin therapy proved effective for treating his condition.
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PMID:Case of a mentally retarded child with non-24 hour sleep-wake syndrome caused by deficiency of melatonin secretion. 1118 22

Niemann-Pick disease (NPD) represents a type of lysosomal storage diseases in which sphingomyelin accumulates in the histocytes and reticuloendothelial cells of the spleen, liver, lymph nodes, bone marrow and central nervous system. We report a child with massive hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, mental retardation and widespread papulonodular lesions. His clinical features conform to the type A subgroup of NPD.
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PMID:Type A Niemann-Pick disease. 1120 22


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