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Characterization of Cardiac Teratogenicity in a Mouse Model of Maternal PhenylketonuriaSeagraves, Nikki Jo 30 August 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Mental retardation in children : an epidemiological and etiological study of mentally retarded children born 1959-1970 in a northern Swedish countyK:son Blomquist, Hans January 1982 (has links)
In an unselected series of mentally retarded children in the county of Västerbotten, Sweden, the annual incidence of children with severe mental retardation (SMR) (IQ < 50) and alive at the age of one year decreased from 5.3 per 1,000 in 1959 - 1963 to 3.1 per 1,000 in 1967 -1970. This was mainly due to a decrease in the incidence of Down's syndrome. In parallel the proportion of mothers 35 years of age or more at the birth of the child decreased significantly. The prevalence of children with SMR in 1976 was 3.5 per 1,000. The main cause of the SMR was prenatal in 70 percent, perinatal in 8 percent and postnatal in 1 percent. The cause of the SMR was untraceable in 20 percent of the cases. Associated CNS-handicaps occurred in 52 percent of the cases. The annual incidence of mildly mentally retarded children (IQ 50 - 69) registered at the Bureau for Provision and Services for Mentally Retarded was 4.2 per 1,000 and the prevalence in 1979 was 3.8 per 1,000. The cause of the mild mental retardation (MMR) was untraceable in 43 percent. Prenatal causes were identified in as many as 43 percent. Perinatal causes were found in 7 percent and postnatal causes in 5 percent of the cases. Associated CNS-handicaps occurred in 30 percent of the cases.A syndrome of mental retardation with X-linked inheritance not recognized previously in Sweden was characterized clinically (mainly in boys, machro-orchidism, verbal disabilities) and cytogenetically (a fragile site on the X-chromosomes seen after cui turing in special folic acid deficient media) and found to have a prevalence of 6 percent in the population of severely mentally retarded boys. This makes this syndrome the next most common cause of SMR in boys after Down's syndrome. The chromosomal fragility was also identified in female carriers, which has implications for genetic counselling.Through identification of an untreated Phenylketonurie mother giving birth to five severely mentally retarded children, attention was focused on the risks for the fetus of the growing number of Phenylketonurie women identified neonatally and treated di etarily but untreated after the age of 10 - 15 years.Great improvement in intellectual and social ability was seen in a boy with phenylketonuria although the dietary treatment was not introduced until the age of eight years.Heavy irradiation of a fetus late in gestation caused mental retardation, microcephaly, stunted growth, and eye and teeth abnormalities, although such abnormalities are thought not to result from irradiation after 20 weeks of pregnancy. / <p>Endast s.1-71: sammanfattningen (kappan) i fulltexten.</p><p>Ej med i fulltexten s.72-145: 7 delar.</p> / digitalisering@umu
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An investigation of the long-term neuropsychological outcome of prenatal teratogenic exposure : fetal alcohol syndrome and maternal PKU syndromeBrock, Susan Robin 01 January 1999 (has links)
Previous research has shown a relationship between prenatal teratogenic exposure and impaired cognitive functioning. However, data regarding the long-term outcome of prenatal teratogenic exposure are minimal. The present study investigated the long-term neuropsychological functioning (specifically attention and memory) of adults prenatally exposed to alcohol or phenylalanine, and examined whether there was evidence to suggest that there are effects specific to individual teratogens. Using a battery of attention and memory measures the performance of 17 adults diagnosed with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) and 13 adults with Maternal Phenylketonuria Syndrome (MPKUS) was assessed. In order to identify the pattern of deficits associated with prenatal teratogenic exposure, an age and CA and IQ matched control group was assessed. Attention was broadly assessed using Mirsky et al.'s (1991) neuropsychological model of attention. The memory and learning tests administered included a number of well standardized measures of verbal learning, verbal and visual recall, delayed recall, and recognition. Paired comparisons between the FAS group and age and CA and IQ matched controls indicated a unique pattern of attention and memory deficits consistent with previous research with children and adolescents. Specifically, adult individuals with FAS appear to have deficits in acquisition of new material, delayed recall of verbal material and in response inhibition. Paired comparisons between the MPKUS group and CA and IQ matched controls indicated that the pattern of attention and memory deficits seen in adults with MPKUS is difficult to distinguish when the effect of IQ is removed. A randomized block design using IQ as the blocking variable and group (FAS, MPKUS, or Controls) as the treatment variable was utilized to examine the question of whether the two prenatal teratogen groups differ from one another and from Controls in terms of attention and memory ability. Ten blocks of three participants (FAS, MPKUS and Control) matched on IQ were formed. The randomized block analyses revealed few differences between the groups and failed to reveal a number of the differences found in the paired comparisons between the prenatal teratogen groups and the CA and IQ matched Control group. Possible reasons for these differences are discussed.
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