monarch-initiative / mondo

Mondo Disease Ontology
http://obofoundry.org/ontology/mondo
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[NTR/gene] Neurocutaneous Syndrome #5688

Open pnrobinson opened 1 year ago

pnrobinson commented 1 year ago

Preferred gene-related syndrome label Neurocutaneous Syndrome

Could be a useful lgrouping term for CEDNIK syndrome, NF1, TS, etc.

The 3 most common types of neurocutaneous syndromes are:

Tuberous sclerosis (TS)

Neurofibromatosis (NF), including NF1, NF2, and Schwannomatosis

Sturge-Weber disease

@ahamosh thoughts?

ahamosh commented 1 year ago

Below is the definition of a phakomatosis. Do you want neurocutaneous or neuroectodermal? Let's discuss tomorrow. phakomatoses phakos, Greek, lens Neurocutaneous syndromes A group of inherited conditions–many are AD–that cause disordered growth of ectodermal tissues, with distinctive skin lesions and tumors and/or defects of the nervous system and/or retina Phakomatoses Ataxia-telangiectasia An AR disorder characterized by cerebellar ataxia, oculomotor apraxia, telangiectasias of bulbar conjunctiva, skin of ears, and skin folds–appearing by age 3–and sinopulmonary infections; telangiectasias later extend to the butterfly region of the face; most Pts die in adolescence Basal cell nevus syndrome See there. Nevus sebaceous of Jadassohn An occasionally AD clinical condition characterized by a congenital solitary lesion most often present in the scalp which, when large, may be associated with internal derangements eg intracranial masses, seizures, mental retardation, skeletal abnormalities, pigmentary changes, ocular lesions and renal hamartomas; 10% of the skin lesions develop into basal cell carcinoma Sturge-Weber disease Encephalotrigeminal angiomatosis An occasionally AD condition characterized by congenital capillary hemangiomas of the head & neck, following normal developmental milestones, mental retardation may ensue, caused in part by the sluggish flow of blood through the pial vessels and venous hemangiomas in the leptomeninges and frontoparietal cortex with ipsilateral port-wine nevi, 'tram-track' radiopacities on the skull caused by calcification of the cerebral cortex Tuberous sclerosis Bourneville-Pringle disease An AD disorder–50% arise de novo Clinical Convulsions, seizures, mental retardation, skin lesions–adenoma sebaceum, sebaceous gland atrophy, angiofibromas, dermal fibrosis with dilated capillaries, shagreen patches, cardiac rhabdomyomas, pulmonary fibrosis, bronchiolar hematomas, bilateral tubular adenomas of kidneys, pancreatic cysts, angiomyolipomas, myxedematous glossitis, spina bifida von Hippel-Lindau disease An AD condition with retinal hemangioblastoma, ↓ erythropoietin production, cerebellar hemangioblastoma Clinical Ataxia, headache, papilledema, angiomas of the liver, kidney, renal adenomas, papillary cystadenomas of epididymis, pancreatic cysts, adrenal pheochromocytomas;1⁄4 develop renal cell cancer von Recklinghausen disease A relatively common–1/3500 AD condition Clinical Neurofibromas, cafe-au-lait spots of skin, scoliosis, gliosis, glioblastoma multiforme, ependymoma, meningioma and schwannoma, 5-10% sarcomatous degeneration, spina bifida and glaucoma. See Neurofibromatosis. Note: Neurofibromatosis, tuberous sclerosis, and von Hippel disease constitute the 'classic' phakomatoses