نتایج جستجو برای: deafness autosomal recessive 59

تعداد نتایج: 115286  

Journal: :iranian journal of child neurology 0
elinaz akbariazar msc of human genetic, university of social welfare& rehabilitation sciences, tehran, iran mohammad reza ebrahimpour msc of human genetics, university of social welfare & rehabilitation sciences, tehran, iran saeedeh akbari msc of human genetics, university of social welfare & rehabilitation sciences, tehran, iran sanaz arzhanghi bsc in nursing, genetics research center, university of social welfare & rehabilitation sciences, tehran, iran seydeh sedigheh abedini msc of human genetics, university of social welfare & rehabilitation sciences, tehran, iran hossein najmabadi professor of molecular biology, university of social welfare & rehabilitation sciences, tehran, iran

how to cite this article: akbarizar e, ebrahimpour m, akbari s, arzhanghi s, abedini ss, najmabadi h, kahrizi k. a novel deletion mutation in aspm gene in an iranian family with autosomal recessive primary microcephaly. iran j child neurol.  2013 spring;7(2):23-30.   objective autosomal recessive primary microcephaly (mcph) is a neurodevelopmental and genetically heterogeneous disorder with dec...

Journal: :caspian journal of internal medicine 0
peyman eshraghi ali abaskhanian amirreza mohammadhasani

background: phenylketonuria (pku) is an autosomal recessive disease of phenylalanine metabolism that brings deficiency of the enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase (pah). early diagnosis is very important to prevent complications. this study was designed to describe characteristics of patients with phenylketonuria in mazandaran province in northern iran. methods: we studied 24 cases suffering from p...

Journal: :Human molecular genetics 1997
M M Carrasquillo J Zlotogora S Barges A Chakravarti

Non-syndromic recessive deafness (NSRD) is the most common form of prelingual hereditary hearing loss. To date, 10 autosomal NSRD loci (DFNBs) have been identified by genetic mapping; at least three times as many additional loci are expected to be identified. We have performed linkage analyses in two inter-related inbred kindreds, comprised of >50 affecteds, from a single Israeli-Arab village s...

Journal: :Mutation research 2009
Nele Hilgert Richard J H Smith Guy Van Camp

Hearing impairment is the most common sensory disorder, present in 1 of every 500 newborns. With 46 genes implicated in nonsyndromic hearing loss, it is also an extremely heterogeneous trait. Here, we categorize for the first time all mutations reported in nonsyndromic deafness genes, both worldwide and more specifically in Caucasians. The most frequent genes implicated in autosomal recessive n...

Journal: :Human molecular genetics 1999
E Maestrini B P Korge J Ocaña-Sierra E Calzolari S Cambiaghi P M Scudder A Hovnanian A P Monaco C S Munro

The multiplicity of functions served by intercellular gap junctions is reflected by the variety of phenotypes caused by mutations in the connexins of which they are composed. Mutations in the connexin26 (Cx26) gene ( GJB2 ) at 13q11-q13 are a major cause of autosomal recessive hearing loss (DFNB1), but have also been reported in autosomal dominant deafness (DFNA3). We now report a Cx26 mutation...

2010
Jae Suk Baek Eun Jung Bae Sang Yun Lee Sung Sup Park So Yeon Kim Kyu Nam Jung Chung Il Noh

The Jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome (JLNS) is an autosomal recessive syndrome characterized by congenital deafness and cardiac phenotype (QT prolongation, ventricular arrhythmias, and sudden death). JLNS has been shown to occur due to homozygous mutation in KCNQ1 or KCNE1. There have been a few clinical case reports on JLNS in Korea; however, these were not confirmed by a genetic study. We i...

Journal: :Advances in oto-rhino-laryngology 1991
F Cusimano E Martines C Rizzo

Deafness and electrocardiographic changes (prolongation of the Q-T interval and inversion of the T wave) with a clinical picture of syncopal attacks and sudden death, were described as a distinct syndrome by Jervell and Lange-Nielsen in 1957. The syndrome is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait. In this study, all the cases reported since 1957 and their proposed prevalence are reviewed. Th...

2004
Monisha Mukherjee S. R. Phadke B. Mittal

It has long been recognized that heredity plays a major role in hearing impairment. Although the facts about the genetic basis of hearing loss have fascinated both clinicians and geneticists for a long time, it is only within the last few years that the genes and molecular mechanisms underlying deafness have begun to be discovered. There is a great deal of genetic heterogeneity in deafness. Thi...

Journal: :Journal of medical genetics 2001
M Mustapha N Salem V Delague E Chouery M Ghassibeh M Rai J Loiselet C Petit A Mégarbané

EDITOR—The most common sensory deficit in humans is hearing loss, aVecting 1 in 1000 children, with approximately half of the cases having a genetic cause. The majority of these genetic causes are non-syndromic, of which approximately 75% have an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. So far, nearly 30 genes that cause non-syndromic recessive deafness (NSRD) have been located (for review see ...

Journal: :بینا 0
توکا بنایی t banaie مشهد- بیمارستان فوق تخصصی چشم پزشکی خاتم الانبیا (ص) سیامک زارعی قنواتی s zarei ghanavati مشهد- بیمارستان فوق تخصصی چشم پزشکی خاتم الانبیا (ص) مهران هیرادفر m hiradfar مشهد- بیمارستان فوق تخصصی چشم پزشکی خاتم الانبیا (ص) رحیم وکیلی r vakili مشهد- بیمارستان فوق تخصصی چشم پزشکی خاتم الانبیا (ص)

purpose: to report five cases of wolfram syndrome, an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disease with ِdiabetes insipidus, diabetes mellitus, optic atrophy, and deafness (didmoad syndrome). patients and findings: all of the five patients had diabetes mellitus and optic atrophy. four patients had hearing loss. in spite of persistence of polyuria and polydipsia, diabetes insipidus had been prev...

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