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Dive into the research topics where Virginia P. Johnson is active.

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Featured researches published by Virginia P. Johnson.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1995

Correlation of severity and outcome with plasma sterol levels in variants of the Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome

G S Tint; Gerald Salen; Ashok K. Batta; Sarah Shefer; Mira Irons; Ellen Roy Elias; Dianne N. Abuelo; Virginia P. Johnson; Marie Lambert; Richard Lutz; Carolyn Schanen; Colleen A. Morris; George Hoganson; Rhiannon Hughes-Benzie

OBJECTIVES To determine whether type I and the more severe type II variant of Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome have the same metabolic defect and to learn which plasma sterol measurements best predict survival. METHODS Plasma sterols were measured in 33 individuals (24 type I, 9 type II) with a clinical diagnosis of the syndrome. RESULTS Cholesterol levels were abnormally low (61 +/- 34 mg/dl) in type I subjects, whereas concentrations of the cholesterol precursor 7-dehydrocholesterol and its isomer 8-dehydrocholesterol were elevated 40- to 10,000-fold. Plasma cholesterol levels were significantly lower and total dehydrocholesterol levels higher in type II than in type I. Six children with the type II variant died by 13 weeks with mean plasma cholesterol levels 6.2 +/- 3.1 mg/dl, versus 17 +/- 11 mg/dl in the three surviving children with type II (p < 0.05). No child with a cholesterol level 7 mg/dl or less lived longer than 13 weeks. CONCLUSIONS Patients with type I and type II variants of Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome have markedly reduced activity of the enzyme that converts 7-dehydrocholesterol to cholesterol, but the extent of the block is far more complete in type II. Survival correlates strongly with higher plasma cholesterol concentrations.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1997

Treatment of Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome: Results of a multicenter trial

Mira Irons; Ellen Roy Elias; Diane Abuelo; Marilyn J. Bull; Carol L. Greene; Virginia P. Johnson; Laura Keppen; Carolyn Schanen; G. Stephen Tint; Gerald Salen

Patients with the RSH or Smith-Lemli-Optiz syndrome (SLOS) have an inborn error of cholesterol biosynthesis which results in a deficiency of cholesterol and an elevation of the cholesterol precursor, 7-dehydrocholesterol. A treatment protocol consisting of administration of cholesterol +/- bile acids was initiated in an attempt to correct the biochemical abnormalities seen. Fourteen patients (8 female, 6 male: ages 2 months to 15 years) have now been treated for 6-15 months. Three patients received cholesterol alone, while 11 patients received cholesterol and one or more bile acids. Biochemical improvement in sterol levels and in the ratio of cholesterol to total sterols was noted in all patients. The most marked improvement was noted in patients presenting with initial cholesterol levels < 40 mg/dl. No toxicity was observed. Clinical improvement in growth and neurodevelopmental status was also observed.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1996

Uniparental isodisomy of chromosome 14 in two cases: An abnormal child and a normal adult

Peter Papenhausen; O. Thomas Mueller; Maxine J. Sutcliffe; Theresa M. Diamond; Boris G. Kousseff; Virginia P. Johnson

Uniparental disomy (UPD) of a number of different chromosomes has been found in associated with abnormal phenotypes. A growing body of evidence for an imprinting effect involving chromosome 14 has been accumulating. We report on a case of paternal UPD of chromosome 14 studied in late gestation due to polyhydramnios and a ventral wall hernia. A prenatal karyotype documented a balanced Robertsonian 14:14 translocation. The baby was born prematurely with hairy forehead, retrognathia, mild puckering of the lips and finger contractures. Hypotonia has persisted since birth and at age one year, a tracheostomy for laryngomalacia and gastrostomy for feeding remain necessary. Absence of maternal VNTR polymorphisms and homozygosity of paternal polymorphisms using chromosome 14 specific probes at D14S22 and D14S13 loci indicated paternal uniparental isodisomy (pUPID). Parental chromosomes were normal. We also report on a case of maternal UPD in a normal patient with a balanced Robertsonian 14:14 translocation and a history of multiple miscarriages. Five previous reports of chromosome 14 UPD suggest that an adverse developmental effect may be more severe whenever the UPD is paternal in origin. This is the second reported patient with paternal UPD and the fifth reported with maternal UPD, and only few phenotypic similarities are apparent. Examination of these chromosome 14 UPD cases of maternal and paternal origin suggests that there are syndromic imprinting effects.


Clinical Genetics | 2008

The Wolf-Hirschhorn (4p-) syndrome

Virginia P. Johnson; R. D. Mulder; Richard Hosen

In a review of 43 cases, the phenotypic spectrum of the Wolf‐Hirschhorn syndrome is analyzed and the frequency of clinical anomalies is tabulated. The characteristic features are intrauterine growth retardation, severe psychomotor retardation, typical facies, and various major and minor congenital anomalies suggestive of a midline fusion defect. Diagnosis is established by karyotyping ‐ deletion of the short arm of chromosome No. 4. All cases so far reported are de novo occurrences with no sibling involvement and normal parents. Prognosis is poor, with death in the first 2 years of life in 34 % of cases, usually due to cardiac decompensation or infection. Psychomotor retardation is profound, so that heroic medical efforts probably need to be reconsidered.


European Journal of Pediatrics | 1975

Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome: Review and report of two affected siblings

Virginia P. Johnson

This paper reports two siblings with the Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome and reviews the literature on the subject. SLOS is a syndrome of multiple congenital anomalies with mental and growth retardation, unusual facies, genito-urinary and hand and foot abnormalities inherited as an autosomal recessive trait.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1997

Delimiting the Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome critical region to 750 kilobase pairs

Michael R. Altherr; Tracy J. Wright; Karen Denison; Ana V. Perez-Castro; Virginia P. Johnson

Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS) is a multiple anomaly condition characterized by mental and developmental defects, resulting from the absence of the distal segment of one chromosome 4 short arm (4p16.3). Owing to the complex and variable expression of this disorder, it is thought that the WHS is a contiguous gene syndrome with an undefined number of genes contributing to the phenotype. The 2.2 Mbp genomic segment previously defined as the critical region by the analyses of patients with terminal or interstitial deletions is extremely gene dense and an intensive investigation of the developmental role of all the genes contained within it would be daunting and expensive. Further refinement in the definition of the critical region would be valuable but depends on available patient material and accurate clinical evaluation. In this study, we have utilized fluorescence in situ hybridization to further characterize a WHS patient previously demonstrated to have an interstitial deletion and demonstrate that the distal breakpoint occurs between the loci FGFR3 and D4S168. This reduces the critical region for this syndrome to less than 750 kbp. This has the effect of eliminating several genes previously proposed as contributing to this syndrome and allows further research to focus on a more restricted region of the genome and a limited set of genes for their role in the WHS syndrome.


Clinical Genetics | 2008

A new syndrome of aphalangy, hemivertebrae, and urogenital-intestinal dysgenesis.

Virginia P. Johnson; David P. Munson

Two cases of aphalangy, hemivertebrae, and urogenital‐intestinal dysgenesis in a sibship are described. This constellation of malformations may represent a previously undescribed autosomal recessive trait.


Pediatrics | 1997

Magnetic resonance imaging of brain anomalies in fetal alcohol syndrome

Victor W. Swayze; Virginia P. Johnson; James W. Hanson; Joseph Piven; Yutaka Sato; Jay N. Giedd; D.M. Mosnik; Nancy C. Andreasen


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1996

Fetal alcohol syndrome: Craniofacial and central nervous system manifestations

Virginia P. Johnson; Victor W. Swayze; Yutaka Sato; Nancy C. Andreasen


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1996

Distinct 15q Genotypes in Russell-Silver and Ring 15 Syndromes

Peter K. Rogan; James R. Seip; Daniel J. Driscoll; Peter Papenhausen; Virginia P. Johnson; Salmo Raskin; Amy Louise Woodward; Merlin G. Butler

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Michael R. Altherr

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Ellen Roy Elias

Boston Children's Hospital

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Gerald Salen

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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John M. Opitz

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Laura Keppen

University of South Dakota

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Nancy C. Andreasen

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Peter Papenhausen

University of South Florida

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