Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (asymmetrical)
12,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report the neuropathologic findings in a 63-year-old white male with a history of birth asphyxia, cerebral palsy, seizures and mild mental retardation in conjunction with similar brain pathologic findings in animal models of perinatal asphyxia. The human case showed a left cerebral hemispheric hemiatrophy associated with an extensive ulegyria involving all cerebral lobes on that side and a single microscopic focus of cortical atrophy in the right hemisphere. Among a large number of experimental perinatal asphyctic exposures only an occasional animal, like the human case described, showed unilateral hemispheric injury with softening and necrosis if examined early and ulegyria with hemispheric hemiatrophy if examined late. The present paper suggests that perinatal asphyxia under specific pathophysiologic conditions may cause unilateral brain injury. Our experimental studies suggest the specific condition of perinatal asphyxia potentially causing unilateral or asymmetrical brain damage is marked hypoxemia combined with substantial reductions in blood pressure but without circulatory collapse. Given these conditions, the asymmetry of the brain damage likely reflects fetal head position within the gravitational field relative to the heart. With disturbed cerebral blood flow autoregulation from asphyxia, the gravitational field likely accentuates the ischemia of those brain areas most elevated above the level of the heart. Thus, we postulate head position may play a pivotal role in defining brain regions that are damaged in hypotensive perinatal asphyxia. This interpretation may affect the intensive care of hypoxemic, hypotensive newborns aimed at minimizing the risk of brain damage.
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PMID:Cerebral hemiatrophy--correlation of human with animal experimental data. 325 12

Intelligence-related differences in the detection of stimulus organization previously identified by Soraci, Carlin, Deckner, and Baumeister (1990) were examined further to determine whether they would (a) extend to similar checkerboard stimuli varying solely with respect to symmetry and (b) generalize to form-like polygon stimuli. Detection performances of 10 individuals with mild mental retardation, 10 CA-matched, and 10 MA-matched individuals were assessed on a rapid presentation a two-choice match-to-sample task. The organizations of the target and distractor stimuli were varied across four levels of symmetry: double, vertical, horizontal, and asymmetrical. Results indicated that detection rates for each group were highest when the target stimulus was vertically symmetrical or when target-distractor structural disparity was maximal. However, no significant main effects of subject group or stimulus type (i.e., checkerboard vs. polygon) were found, thereby arguing for the robustness of the symmetry effect across groups differing in intelligence and physically dissimilar stimulus types.
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PMID:Similarities in the detection of stimulus symmetry by individuals with and without mental retardation. 829 10

The association of brain malformations and symptomatic epilepsy in the setting of neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is rarely reported. When it occurs, patients can present clinically with infantile spasms, focal seizures, generalized tonic clonic seizures or atypical absences. We report on a 10-year-old (molecularly proven) NF1 girl manifesting a complex epileptic syndrome resembling the Foix-Chavany-Marie spectrum (also known as opercular syndrome) associated with bilateral (opercular and paracentral lobular) polymicrogyria (PMG). Anecdotal cases of unilateral PMG in the setting of NF1 have been described in association with other-than-opercular epileptic syndromes. The typical clinical opercular syndrome consisting in mild mental retardation, epilepsy and pseudobulbar palsy is usually associated to bilateral perisylvian PMG (BPP) CONCLUSION: To the best of our knowledge, the complex epileptic syndrome hereby reported has not been previously recorded in the setting of NF1. In addition, the present girl manifested all the clinical features of an opercular syndrome but had an asymmetrical PMG (not a BPP).
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PMID:Complex epileptic (Foix-Chavany-Marie like) syndrome in a child with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) and bilateral (opercular and paracentral) polymicrogyria. 1914 Nov 42