Search results for "HEREDITARY"

showing 10 items of 650 documents

14q13.1-21.1 deletion encompassing the HPE8 locus in an adolescent with intellectual disability and bilateral microphthalmia, but without holoprosenc…

2011

Interstitial deletions involving 14q13.1q21.1 are rare. In the literature at least 10 cases involving this region have been described and all patients showed a phenotype within the holoprosencephaly (HPE) spectrum. Previous studies suggested the HPE8 region as a candidate locus for HPE at 14q13. We report an adolescent with a 14q13.1q21.1 deletion encompassing the HPE8 region associated with intellectual disability (ID), bilateral microphthalmia, and coloboma, without cerebral anomalies typical of HPE. Except for ocular defects (i.e., microphthalmia, coloboma) consistent with HPE-type anomalies, the minor facial dysmorphia was not suggestive for HPE and the absence of cerebral anomalies sho…

Malemusculoskeletal diseasescongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesCandidate geneAdolescentID/MCA deletion syndromeLocus (genetics)MicrophthalmiamicroformSettore MED/38 - Pediatria Generale E SpecialisticaHoloprosencephalyIntellectual DisabilityIntellectual disabilityGeneticsmedicineHumansMicrophthalmoschromosome 14q deletionIn Situ Hybridization FluorescenceGenetics (clinical)Sequence DeletionChromosomes Human Pair 14GeneticsComparative Genomic HybridizationColobomabiologybusiness.industryNPAS3Faciesmedicine.diseaseeye diseasesDevelopmental disorderPhenotypeholoprosencephalySettore MED/03 - Genetica MedicaGenetic Lociarray-CGHbiology.proteinbusinessAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics Part A
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Expanded CTG repeats trigger miRNA alterations in Drosophila that are conserved in myotonic dystrophy type 1 patients

2013

Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) is caused by the expansion of CTG repeats in the 3' untranslated region of the DMPK gene. Several missplicing events and transcriptional alterations have been described in DM1 patients. A large number of these defects have been reproduced in animal models expressing CTG repeats alone. Recent studies have also reported miRNA dysregulation in DM1 patients. In this work, a Drosophila model was used to investigate miRNA transcriptome alterations in the muscle, specifically triggered by CTG expansions. Twenty miRNAs were differentially expressed in CTG-expressing flies. Of these, 19 were down-regulated, whereas 1 was up-regulated. This trend was confirmed for thos…

Malemusculoskeletal diseasescongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesDown-RegulationGene ExpressionBiologyMyotonic dystrophyLife ExpectancyGeneticsmedicineAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsHumansMyotonic DystrophyMuscle SkeletalMolecular BiologyCells CulturedGenetics (clinical)Oligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysisGeneticsBase SequenceLife spanNuclear ProteinsGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseMicroRNAsDrosophila melanogasterGene Expression RegulationFemaleTranscriptomeTrinucleotide Repeat Expansion
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Q289P mutation in the FGFR2 gene: first report in a patient with type 1 Pfeiffer syndrome.

2008

When normal development and growth of the calvarial sutures is disrupted, craniosynostosis (premature calvarial suture fusion) may result. Classical craniosynostosis syndromes are autosomal dominant traits and include Apert, Pfeiffer, Crouzon, Jackson-Weiss, and Saethre-Chotzen syndromes. In these conditions, there is premature fusion of skull bones leading to an abnormal head shape, ocular hypertelorism with proptosis, and midface hypoplasia. It is known that mutations in the fibroblast growth factor receptors 1, 2, and 3 cause craniosynostosis. We report on a child with a clinically diagnosed Pfeiffer syndrome that shows the missense point mutation Q289P in exon 8 of the FGFR2 gene. This …

Malemusculoskeletal diseasescongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyCraniosynostosisSettore MED/38 - Pediatria Generale E SpecialisticaHumansPoint MutationMedicineMissense mutationReceptor Fibroblast Growth Factor Type 2HypertelorismGeneticsFibrous jointbusiness.industryFibroblast growth factor receptor 2Craniofacial DysostosisInfantDysostosisExonsAcrocephalosyndactyliamedicine.diseaseSkullPhenotypemedicine.anatomical_structurePfeiffer - Crouzon - Apert - Craniosynostosis - Finger and toes abnormalities - Fibroblast growth factor receptorPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthPfeiffer syndromeFemalemedicine.symptombusiness
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Duchenne muscular dystrophy and idiopathic hyperCKemia segregating in a family

1995

A 7-month-old boy with gross motor delay and failure to thrive presented with rhabdomyolysis following an acute asthmatic episode. During hospitalization an electrocardiographic conversion to a Wolff-Parkinson-White type 1 (WPW) pattern took place. Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) was suspected based on elevated creatine kinase (CK) serum levels, muscle biopsy, and family history. The diagnosis was confirmed by molecular analysis, which documented a deletion corresponding to cDNA probe 1-2a in the dystrophin gene, in the propositus and in an affected male cousin of his mother. "Idiopathic" hyperCKemia was found in the propositus, his father, and 5 of his relatives. We suggest that the unus…

Malemusculoskeletal diseasescongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyDuchenne muscular dystrophyMolecular Sequence DataGene mutationPolymerase Chain ReactionMuscular DystrophiesGenomic ImprintingPrenatal DiagnosisInternal medicinemedicineHumansFamily historyCreatine KinaseGenetics (clinical)X-linked recessive inheritanceDNA PrimersGenes DominantMuscle biopsyBase Sequencebiologymedicine.diagnostic_testGenetic Carrier ScreeningInfantExonsmedicine.diseasePedigreeEndocrinologyMutationFailure to thrivebiology.proteinFemaleCreatine kinasemedicine.symptomDystrophinMetabolism Inborn ErrorsAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics
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Oculoectodermal syndrome: Report of a new case with a broad clinical spectrum

2014

Oculoectodermal syndrome (OMIM 600268) is rare and characterized by aplasia cutis congenita, epibulbar dermoids, and other abnormalities. We report herein on a newly recognized patient with oculoectodermal syndrome, which is the 19th reported patient with OES. The boy aged six years demonstrated a broad clinical spectrum of this condition, including aplasia cutis congenita, epibulbar dermoids, hyperkeratotic papule, mildly enlarged cisterna magna, and an enlarged fluid space in the quadrigeminal cistern, suggesting a cyst. He also manifested anomalies not reported associated with this disorder, including systematized epidermal nevus following Blaschko's lines, hypopigmented skin lesions, an…

Malemusculoskeletal diseasescongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesmedicine.medical_specialtyAplasia cutis congenitaHypopigmented skin lesionsEctodermal DysplasiaOculoectodermal syndromeGeneticsmedicineHumansCystGenetics (clinical)Dermoid CystSkinHyperkeratotic papuleHypopigmentationSystematized epidermal nevusbusiness.industryEpibulbar dermoidsBrainmedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingDermatologyEnlarged cisterna magnaPhenotypeChild Preschoolmedicine.symptombusinessAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics Part A
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Fractional differential equations and related exact mechanical models

2013

Creep and relaxation tests, performed on various materials like polymers, rubbers and so on are well-fitted by power-laws with exponent β ∈ [0, 1] (Nutting (1921), Di Paola et al. (2011)). The consequence of this observation is that the stress-strain relation of hereditary materials is ruled by fractional operators (Scott Blair (1947), Slonimsky (1961)). A large amount of researches have been performed in the second part of the last century with the aim to connect constitutive fractional relations with some mechanical models by means of fractance trees and ladders (see Podlubny (1999)). Recently, Di Paola and Zingales (2012) proposed a mechanical model that corresponds to fractional stress-…

Mechanical systems Power-law description Fractional hereditary materials Discretized models Modal transformation.Differential equationFractional hereditary materialDiscretized modelMathematical analysisRelaxation (iterative method)Extension (predicate logic)Mechanical systems Power-law description Fractional hereditary materials Discretized modelsModal transformationDashpotMechanical systemMechanical systemComputational MathematicsComputational Theory and MathematicsCreepModeling and SimulationPower-law descriptionModal transformationLinear combinationRepresentation (mathematics)Settore ICAR/08 - Scienza Delle CostruzioniMathematics
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"MEG 2015".

2017

Papers presented at the International Conference of the FIRB Project 2010 "Medical Terminology and Epistemology for a Lexikon of Genetics and its Degenerations from Hippocrates to ICD-10" (Palermo, 4-6 May 2015), Special Issue of the Journal Medicina nei Secoli (Voll. 28/3-29/1).

Medical Terminology and EpistemologySettore MED/02 - Storia Della MedicinaLexikon of GeneticCauses therapeutic and diagnostic Measures of Hereditary DiseaseSettore L-FIL-LET/02 - Lingua E Letteratura GrecaHistory of Ancient and Modern Medicine.
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Prader–Willi Syndrome with Angelman Syndrome in the Offspring

2021

We report the second case, to the best of our knowledge, of a mother with Prader–Willi syndrome (PWS) who gave birth to a daughter with Angelman syndrome (AS). The menarche occurred when she was 16, and the following menstrual cycles were irregular, but she never took sexual hormone replacement therapy. At the age of 26, our patient with PWS became pregnant. The diagnosis was confirmed by molecular genetic testing that revealed a ~5.7 Mb deletion in the 15q11.1–15q13 region on the paternal allele in the mother with PWS and the maternal one in the daughter with AS, respectively. Both the mother with PWS and the daughter with AS showed peculiar clinical and genetic features of the two syndrom…

Medicine (General)congenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyPrader–Willi syndromeOffspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectCase Report030209 endocrinology & metabolismFertilityHuman sexuality03 medical and health sciencesR5-9200302 clinical medicinePregnancyAngelman syndromeHumansMedicineAllelemedia_commonfertilityDaughter030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicineoffspringbusiness.industrynutritional and metabolic diseasesGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseSettore MED/39 - Neuropsichiatria Infantilenervous system diseasesTransgender hormone therapyAngelman syndromeMenarcheFemaleAngelman syndrome Fertility Offspring Prader–Willi syndrome Female Fertility Humans Pregnancy Angelman Syndrome Prader-Willi SyndromebusinessPrader-Willi SyndromeMedicina
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Occurrence of Edwardsiella tarda in wild European eels Anguilla anguilla from Mediterranean Spain

2007

Pure cultures of Edwarsiella tarda were isolated from body ulcers and internal organs of wild European eels caught in a Mediterranean freshwater coastal lagoon (Albufera Lake, Valencia, Spain) over a 1 yr period. Overall, the E. tarda isolation rate from wild eels was 9%, but this increased to 22.8% in diseased individuals. All 22 E. tarda isolates belonged to the 'wild-type' biogroup of the species and were virulent for eels (lethal dose that kills 50% of exposed individuals [LD50 dose]: 10(4.85) to 10(6.83) CFU ind.(-1)), and therefore represented the aetiological agent of the haemorrhagic disease observed in wild European eels. The E. tarda isolates and E. tarda CECT 894T type strain wer…

Mediterranean climatecongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesendocrine systemanimal structuresPopulationZoologyVirulenceMicrobial Sensitivity TestsAquatic ScienceIsolation rateFish DiseasesMediterranean seaAnti-Infective AgentsAnguillidaeAgglutination TestsMediterranean SeaPrevalenceAnimalsskin and connective tissue diseaseseducationEdwardsiella tardaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAntigens Bacterialeducation.field_of_studyVirulencebiologyEcologyEdwardsiella tardaLethal doseEnterobacteriaceae InfectionsAnguillabiology.organism_classificationPhenotypeSpainDiseases of Aquatic Organisms
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Recombinant norovirus GII.g/GII.12 gastroenteritis in children.

2011

Recombinant GII.g/GII.12 norovirus (NoV) strains emerged in 2008 in Australia and subsequently have been associated with gastroenteritis outbreaks worldwide. In the winter season 2009-2010 GII.12 strains caused 16% of the NoV outbreaks in the United States. During 2009-2010 we also identified GII.g/GII.12 strains during surveillance of sporadic cases of gastroenteritis in Italian children. Severity scores were calculated for the GII.g/GII.12 NoV infections using the Vesikari scale and in two out of three paediatric cases they exceeded the median value calculated for concomitant GII.4 infections. Upon sequence analysis, the Italian strains were found to be recombinant viruses and displayed d…

Microbiology (medical)Settore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia Clinicacongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesGenotypeSequence analysisvirusesBiologyNorovirus GII.g GII.12 Gastroenteritis Italy Recombinationmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologylaw.inventionMicrobiologyDisease Outbreaksfluids and secretionsViral geneticslawGenotypeGeneticsmedicineHumansChildMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyNorovirus GIIRecombination GeneticPolymorphism GeneticNorovirusvirus diseasesOutbreakInfantSequence Analysis DNAVirologyGastroenteritisPhylogeographyInfectious DiseasesItalyChild PreschoolNorovirusRecombinant DNARNA ViralCapsid ProteinsWinter seasonInfection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases
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