نتایج جستجو برای: neonatal hypotonia genetic

تعداد نتایج: 692856  

Journal: :Prague medical report 2011
J Gut Š Kutílek

Idiopathic infantile hypercalcaemia (IIH) is a mineral metabolism disorder of unknown origin. It is characterized by high levels of serum calcium resulting in parathyroid hormone (PTH) suppression, muscle hypotonia, thirst, anorexia, failure to thrive, psychomotor retardation, constipation, nephrocalcinosis. Treatment consists of low calcium diet, glucocorticoids, furosemide. We present a case ...

Journal: :Neurologia 2010
P Hurtado H Pachajoa

Joubert syndrome (OMIM 213 300) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder, whose locus is on chromosome 9q; it is characterized by ataxia, psychomotor retardation, ocular and respiratory abnormalities related to dysgenesis of cerebellar vermis and mesencephalon. It is currently included in the malformation spectrum of cerebello-oculorenal syndromes (CORS)1. An image known as a “molar tooth sign” i...

Journal: :Indian pediatrics 2017
Vandana Jain Amit Satapathy Jaivinder Yadav Rajni Sharma Venkatesan Radha Viswanathan Mohan Elisa De Franco Sian Ellard

OBJECTIVE To study the genetic mutations and clinical profile in children with neonatal diabetes mellitus. METHODS Genetic evaluation, clinical management and follow-up of infants with neonatal diabetes. RESULTS Eleven infants were studied of which eight had permanent neonatal diabetes. Median age at presentation was 8 weeks and mean (SD) birth weight was 2.4 (0.5) kg. Pathogenic genetic mu...

Journal: :Genetic testing 2000
C Fridman M C Varela F Kok N Setian C P Koiffmann

Here we describe the genetic studies performed in 53 patients with the suspected diagnosis of Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS). PWS is characterized by neonatal hypotonia, hypogonadism, delayed psychomotor development, hyperphagia, obesity, short stature, small hands and feet, learning disabilities, and obsessive-compulsive behavior. Through the methylation analysis of the SNRPN gene, microsatellite...

Journal: :PLoS Genetics 2007
Boris V Skryabin Leonid V Gubar Birte Seeger Jana Pfeiffer Sergej Handel Thomas Robeck Elena Karpova Timofey S Rozhdestvensky Jürgen Brosius

Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS [MIM 176270]) is a neurogenetic disorder characterized by decreased fetal activity, muscular hypotonia, failure to thrive, short stature, obesity, mental retardation, and hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. It is caused by the loss of function of one or more imprinted, paternally expressed genes on the proximal long arm of chromosome 15. Several potential PWS mouse models ...

Journal: :Journal of medical genetics 1992
J H DiLiberti

The muscle biopsy results from 14 children with macrocephaly and hypotonia/weakness were correlated with clinical findings compatible with any of the autosomal dominant macrocephaly syndromes. Thirteen of the 14 had evidence of lipid storage myopathy, either generalised or focal. All 13 had examinations consistent with either benign familial macrocephaly, Ruvalcaba-Myhre-Smith syndrome, or Bann...

Journal: :Balkan Journal of Medical Genetics 2020

Journal: :Neurology India 2008
Chieko Fujimura-Kiyono Gabor Z Racz Ichizo Nishino

The term congenital myopathy is applied to muscle disorders presenting with generalized muscle weakness and hypotonia from early infancy with delayed developmental milestones. The congenital myopathies have been classified into various categories based on morphological findings on muscle biopsy. Although the clinical symptoms may seem homogenous, the genetic basis is remarkably variable. This r...

Journal: :Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria 2023

Case presentation: A 5-year-old female with a history of neurodevelopmental delay, hypersomnolence, seizures, and feeding disturbance, presented complex movement disorder. Clinically, there was abnormal facial features, hypotonia, the patient mixed hyperkinetic disorder, consisting chorea, dystonia, myoclonus, hand stereotypies. The presence generalized interposed those movements, resembled “st...

Journal: :Clinical genetics 2009
F Molinari A Kaminska G Fiermonte N Boddaert A Raas-Rothschild P Plouin L Palmieri F Brunelle F Palmieri O Dulac A Munnich L Colleaux

Neonatal epileptic encephalopathies with suppression bursts (SBs) are very severe and relatively rare diseases characterized by neonatal onset of seizures, interictal electroencephalogram (EEG) with SB pattern and very poor neurological outcome or death. Their etiology remains elusive but they are occasionally caused by metabolic diseases or malformations. Studying an Arab Muslim Israeli consan...

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