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11/13. New findings in short rib syndrome.

    This white infant, born at 37 weeks of gestation, had a large cranium, bilateral anophthalmia, a midline cleft lip and palate, hypoplastic chest with short ribs, slightly protuberant abdomen, short limbs, bilateral single transverse palmar creases, a single umbilical artery, normal female external genitalia, normal (46 XY) chromosomes, and radiographic findings suggesting a short-rib (polydactyly) syndrome type IV (Beemer-Langer). autopsy showed pulmonary hypoplasia, bilateral renal cystic dysplasia, intrahepatic bile duct cysts with periportal fibrosis, pancreatic cysts, absent internal genitalia, an atrophic optic chiasm, absent optic nerves, a single left anterior cerebral artery, polymicrogyria, and fusion of the frontal lobes, preoptic region, mammillary bodies, and thalami.
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12/13. Short-rib polydactyly syndrome (SRPS) type III diagnosed during routine prenatal ultrasonographic screening. A case report.

    The prenatal diagnosis of skeletal dysplasias is often initiated by the finding of a shortened extremity during a routine sonographic examination. Second-trimester diagnosis of these anomalies allows the couple to consider the option of terminating a pregnancy when a lethal anomaly is detected. A 21-year-old Bedouin woman underwent routine ultrasonographic screening at 20 weeks' gestation. Severe micromelia, a narrow thorax with shortened ribs, and postaxial polydactyly were detected. The patient delivered a male dwarf at 20 weeks' gestation following prostaglandin induction of labour for a diagnosis of short-rib polydactyly syndrome type III. The prenatal ultrasonographic diagnosis of short-rib polydactyly syndrome type III was made at 20 weeks' gestation, allowing termination of the pregnancy. A proper sonographic approach to skeletal dysplasias allows both early detection and differentiation between lethal and non-lethal anomalies.
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keywords = gestation, pregnancy
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13/13. Transvaginal sonographic diagnosis of short-rib polydactyly dysplasia at 13 weeks' gestation.

    Short-rib polydactyly dysplasia (SRP) is an autosomal recessive, lethal skeletal dysplasia. Sonographic assessment of subsequent pregnancies is, therefore, recommended. This case indicates that this diagnosis can be made in the latter part of the first trimester. A 30-year-old multigravid woman presented at 13 weeks' gestation for an ultrasound examination. She had had a termination of pregnancy for a fetus with pathologically confirmed short-rib polydactyly dysplasia, type I (Saldino-Noonan). On transvaginal sonography, a narrow chest, symmetrical micromelia, polydactyly and anasarca were present. An autopsy confirmed recurrent SRP. Short-rib polydactyly dysplasia may be diagnosed with transvaginal sonography in the first trimester.
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keywords = gestation, pregnancy
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