Cases reported "Muscle Hypotonia"

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1/89. The novel contiguous gene syndrome of myotubular myopathy (MTM1), male hypogenitalism and deletion in Xq28:report of the first familial case.

    Hu et al. (1996) and Laporte et al. (1997) recently proposed a novel contiguous gene syndrome of myotubular myopathy, abnormal male genital development and deletion in Xq28. We studied a family where two male infants, both deceased, had myotubular myopathy and intersexual genitalia. Using FISH we detected in the mother a hemizygous deletion including the myotubularin gene MTM1 and F18 (a gene of yet unknown function). DNA studies with STR-markers (short tandem repeats) within and flanking the deleted segment confirmed the deletion in the family and were used for prenatal diagnosis. Our findings confirm the existence of this novel contiguous gene syndrome and support that the deletion of the F18 gene, or a neighboring gene, may cause ambiguous genitalia or severe hypospadias in males. The mother had low muscle power and marked menstrual irregularities which may indicate that she is a manifesting carrier and that the deletion may include a gene (F18 or other) for gonadal function in females.
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keywords = deletion
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2/89. A previously unrecognised phenotype characterised by obesity, muscular hypotonia, and ability to speak in patients with angelman syndrome caused by an imprinting defect.

    The clinical features of angelman syndrome (AS) comprise severe mental retardation, postnatal microcephaly, macrostomia and prognathia, absence of speech, ataxia, and a happy disposition. We report on seven patients who lack most of these features, but presented with obesity, muscular hypotonia and mild mental retardation. Based on the latter findings, the patients were initially suspected of having prader-willi syndrome. dna methylation analysis of SNRPN and D15S63, however, revealed an AS pattern, ie the maternal band was faint or absent. Cytogenetic studies and microsatellite analysis demonstrated apparently normal chromosomes 15 of biparental inheritance. We conclude that these patients have an imprinting defect and a previously unrecognised form of AS. The mild phenotype may be explained by an incomplete imprinting defect or by cellular mosaicism.
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ranking = 0.084631525169654
keywords = chromosome
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3/89. Characterization of a small supernumerary ring marker derived from chromosome 2 by forward and reverse chromosome painting.

    A small ring-shaped supernumerary marker chromosome (SMC) was detected in 50% of metaphase cells in an 18-month-old boy with mental retardation and multiple congenital anomalies. Conventional cytogenetic methods had failed to identify the origin of the marker. When the patient was age 11.5 years, we defined the origin of the SMC by fluorescence in situ hybridization using a battery of centromere-specific dna probes. The marker was positive with the probe for locus D2Z. More detailed characterization was achieved by using chromosome 2 arm-specific and marker-specific DNA libraries, which were constructed by microdissection of the two arms chromosome 2 and SMC with subsequent amplification of the chromosomal material by a degenerate oligonucleotide-primed polymerase chain reaction (DOP-PCR). The marker was identified as r(2)(p11.2-->q14.1). The propositus had dolichocephaly, coarse hair, low-set ears, exophthalmos, epicanthal folds, strabismus, depressed nasal bridge, high-arched palate, excess of skin on the neck, tapered fingers with mild clinodactyly, talipes varus on the right, inguinal hernia, hypogenitalism, muscular hypotonia, and mental retardation. This is the first case of SMC derived from chromosome 2 that was characterized by forward and reverse chromosome painting.
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ranking = 1.1002098272055
keywords = chromosome
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4/89. Borjeson-Forssman-Lehmann syndrome in a woman with skewed X-chromosome inactivation.

    Borjeson-Forssman-Lehmann (BFL) syndrome is an X-linked recessive disorder characterized by minor facial anomalies, obesity, epilepsy, and severe mental retardation. The phenotype of male patients is usually severe, whereas that of carriers is less severe, suggesting X-linked incompletely recessive inheritance. A recent linkage study mapped the BFL syndrome gene to Xq26-q27. The etiology of the condition in female patients with full manifestations is not known, although nonrandom X-chromosome inactivation has been considered. We recently developed an assay for X-inactivation studies based on the methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique. Using the methylation-specific PCR assay, a woman with typical findings of this syndrome was shown to have an extremely skewed X-inactivation pattern. This finding suggests that the full manifestations of the BFL syndrome in carriers may be caused by skewed X inactivation with a high proportion of cells in which the x chromosome with a normal gene be inactivated, leaving the x chromosome with a mutant gene active.
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ranking = 0.59242067618758
keywords = chromosome
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5/89. 46, XY, del (3) (pter-->p25) syndrome: further delineation of the clinical phenotype.

    A boy with monosomy for the distal part of the short arm of chromosome 3 is described. The clinical features this patient has in common with the previously reported cases include pre- and post-natal growth delay, microcephaly, craniofacial dysmorphism and mental retardation. In addition, minor abnormalities not previously reported were observed, such as snapping thumbs, dorsiflected big toes, connecting anterior and posterior fontanelles at birth, nasolacrimal duct stenosis and double urethral meatus.Conclusion These five new clinical findings may help in further delineation of the syndrome and allow its early recognition. A complete revision of clinical findings published in literature is reported.
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ranking = 0.20262754998069
keywords = monosomy, chromosome
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6/89. Blaschkolinear malformation syndrome in complex trisomy-7 mosaicism.

    Results of repeated peripheral blood chromosome studies were normal in a boy with intrauterine growth retardation, short stature, moderate mental retardation, and multiple minor anomalies. At age 9 years it was recognized that the swirls of pigmentation/depigmentation on his trunk, linear streaks on his limbs, and body asymmetry were suggestive of chromosomal mosaicism. Four skin biopsies were obtained under anesthesia during a dental procedure. All showed mosaicism for a normal cell line, a line with an extra chromosome 7, and a cell line with an extra small ring. In one biopsy, there was a fourth cell line with an extra chromosome 7 and the ring. fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with a chromosome 7 paint confirmed trisomy 7 and the chromosome 7 derivation of the ring. This young man's intra-uterine and postnatal growth retardation is an aneuploidy effect, whereas his asymmetry reflects a mosaicism effect that should have aroused suspicion of tissue-limited mosaicism before the development of obvious Blaschkolinear skin pigmentary dysplasia.
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ranking = 0.42315762584827
keywords = chromosome
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7/89. Cryptic subtelomeric translocations in the 22q13 deletion syndrome.

    Cryptic subtelomeric rearrangements are suspected to underlie a substantial portion of terminal chromosomal deletions. We have previously described two children, one with an unbalanced subtelomeric rearrangement resulting in deletion of 22q13-->qter and duplication of 1qter, and a second with an apparently simple 22q13-->qter deletion. We have examined two additional patients with deletions of 22q13-->qter. In one of the new patients presented here, clinical findings were suggestive of the 22q13 deletion syndrome and FISH for 22qter was requested. Chromosome studies suggested an abnormality involving the telomere of one 22q (46,XX,?add(22)(q13. 3)). FISH using Oncor D22S39 and Vysis ARSA probes confirmed a terminal deletion. A multi-telomere FISH assay showed a signal from 19qter on the deleted chromosome 22. Results were confirmed with 19qtel and 22qtel specific probes. The patient is therefore trisomic for 19qter and monosomic for 22qter. The patient's mother was found to have a translocation (19;22)(q13.42;q13.31). We also re-examined chromosomes from two patients previously diagnosed with 22q deletions who were not known to have a rearrangement using the multi-telomere assay. One of these patients was found to have a derivative chromosome 22 (der(22)t(6;22)(p25;q13)). No evidence of rearrangement was detected in the other patient. Thus we have found the 22q13 deletion to be associated with a translocation in three of four patients. This report illustrates the usefulness of examining patients with hypotonia, severe language delay, and mild facial dysmorphism for this syndrome and suggests that most of these deletions may be unbalanced subtelomeric rearrangements.
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ranking = 1.6983390199534
keywords = deletion, chromosome
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8/89. Adenylosuccinase deficiency: possibly underdiagnosed encephalopathy with variable clinical features.

    Adenylosuccinase deficiency is an autosomal recessive inherited defect of purine synthesis. In enzyme deficient patients, two normally undetectable compounds, succinylaminoimidazole carboxamide riboside and succinyladenosine, accumulate in urine, cerebrospinal fluid and, to a minor extent, in plasma. Analysing 150 highly selected urine specimens from patients with unidentified neurogenerative disorders we discovered the first two German cases of adenylosuccinase deficiency. The deficiency causes moderate to severe mental retardation, often accompanied by epileptic seizures and/or autistic features, and is occasionally associated with growth retardation and muscular hypotonia. Of the two German cases we present here, one patient fits into the clinical picture outlined by previous reports. The other patient, however, shows a pattern of symptoms so far undescribed: severe early infantile epileptic encephalopathy with reduced myelination. On mutation analysis this patient is the first to reveal a 39 base pair deletion in the adenylosuccinase gene in contrast to the point mutations detected in previous cases. Adenylosuccinase deficiency may be an underdiagnosed metabolic disorder with variable expression. This should be taken into consideration in patients with unclassified neurological conditions.
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ranking = 0.11111111111111
keywords = deletion
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9/89. Case of partial duplication 2q3 with characteristic phenotype: rare occurrence of an unbalanced offspring resulting from a parental pericentric inversion.

    We report on a male infant with partial trisomy 2q (q34-->qter) resulting from a maternal pericentric inversion of chromosome 2 (p25. 2q34). The infant had clinical findings similar to the characteristic phenotype associated with a partial duplication of chromosome 2q3. Carriers of pericentric inversions of chromosome 2 have an increased risk of pregnancy loss but have only rarely been reported to have a liveborn offspring with an unbalanced chromosome constitution. This case further confirms the risks associated with a pericentric inversion of chromosome 2 and is the second report with manifestations of the trisomy 2q3 phenotype.
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ranking = 0.42315762584827
keywords = chromosome
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10/89. Fatal acidosis in a neonate with Pearson syndrome.

    We report a neonate who presented with hypotonia, hypoglycemia, and severe lactic acidosis. The patient's acidosis did not respond to bicarbonate replacement and dialysis. Postmortem liver samples revealed portal dilatation, fibrosis, canalicular proliferation, cholestasis, and hepatocellular hemosiderosis. Vacuolization of bone marrow precursors suggested a diagnosis of Pearson syndrome. A common mitochondrial DNA deletion of 4,978 bp was found. We emphasize that Pearson syndrome should be considered in neonates with lactic acidosis despite absence of anemia.
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ranking = 0.11111111111111
keywords = deletion
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