Cases reported "Dwarfism"

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1/23. trisomy 8 syndrome.

    trisomy 8 syndrome, with or without mosaicism, is characterized by the following clinical signs and symptoms: mental retardation, deformed skull, prominent forehad, high-arched palate, low-set and/or dysplastic ears, long and slender trunk, reduced joint mobility, and deep plantar furrows. The deep furrow or longitudinal crease of the sole may be pathognomonic for the syndrome. It should be noted that it has been seen in other rare syndromes. It is recommended that a child with mental retardation and associated multiple anomalies should be subjected to a cytogenetic study in order to define the incidence of this syndrome. Differnetial diagnosis should include: Fong's syndrome, arthrogryposis and otopalato-digital syndrome. It is interesting to note that there seem to be individuals who have had no physical abnormalities and have been identified during an evaluation for repeated abortions. The above described case of trisomy 8 mosaicism was seen and treated for many years by many different specialists without an accurate diagnosis.
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2/23. Prenatal sonographic diagnosis of diastrophic dwarfism.

    A healthy 27-year-old pregnant woman underwent sonographic examination because her uterine size was large for 20 weeks' menstrual age. Sonograms showed short fetal limbs with hitchhiker thumbs and toes, thoracic scoliosis, clubbed feet, and polyhydramnios. The ossification of all bony structures appeared normal, and there was no evidence of fractures. On the basis of these sonographic findings, we diagnosed skeletal dysplasia and short-limbed dwarfism, most likely diastrophic dwarfism. We counseled the parents, and the pregnancy was continued. At 37 weeks menstrual age, the patient vaginally delivered a male infant that weighed 2,560 g. The infant survived with respiratory support during his first few days of life. Postnatal physical and radiologic examinations confirmed the prenatal diagnosis of diastrophic dwarfism. Sonography is the modality of choice for prenatal detection of diastrophic dwarfism.
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3/23. mulibrey nanism: review of 23 cases of a new autosomal recessive syndrome.

    Mulibrey (muscle, liver, brain, eye) nanism is probably an autosomal recessive condition characterized by progressive growth failure of prenatal onset, triangular face with hydrocephaloid skull, general thinness and muscular hypotonicity, peculiar voice, venous congestion caused by pericardial constriction, and pigment dispersion and yellowish dots in ocular fundi. Two thirds of the patients had cutaneous nevi flammei and one third cystic fibrous dysplasia of the tibia. Probably a substantial portion of the affected are lost by early abortion and others by infantile death. The physical capacity and life expectancy seem to vary depending on the degree of the cardiac affection.
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4/23. Prenatal ultrasonographic diagnosis of diastrophic dysplasia at 13 weeks of gestation.

    Diastrophic dwarfism is a skeletal dysplasia that can be identified by ultrasound usually during the second trimester of pregnancy. This severe but non-lethal disorder of the cartilage can be diagnosed earlier using transvaginal sonography (TVS). We present a case of diastrophic dysplasia diagnosed at 13 weeks of gestation by TVS. The early TVS evaluation of the fetal biometric parameters and the accurate study of the morphological features of the fetal long bones and extremities allowed an early diagnosis of this rare pathology that leads to a progressive physical handicap, due mainly to severe kyphoscoliosis and arthropathies. Recently, the routine use of TVS at 11-14 weeks of gestation has permitted an earlier diagnosis to be reached of a great number of congenital anomalies. patients at risk for skeletal dysplasia could benefit from the enhancements of ultrasound techniques. An early diagnosis of diastrophic dysplasia can be reached at the and of the first trimester of pregnancy, using TVS.
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5/23. Inherited ring chromosome 8 without loss of subtelomeric sequences.

    We report the first case of inherited ring chromosome 8 syndrome without loss of subtelomeric sequences. The proband is a 6 1/2-year-old boy with short stature, microcephaly, mild mental retardation, and behavioral problems including hyperactivity and attention deficit. His mother presented the same physical features but intelligence was normal. family history also revealed an uncle and a grandmother, with short stature and microcephaly. Moderate mental retardation was reported in the uncle. Karyotypes and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analyses were performed on peripheral blood lymphocytes for both child and mother. The child's karyotype was reported as 46,XY,r(8)(p23q24.3)[24]/45,XY,-8[2] and the mother's karyotype 46,XX,r(8)(p23q24.3)[22]/45,XX,-8[2]/47,XX,r(8)(p23q24.3), r(8)(p23q24.3)[1]. FISH studies showed no deletion of subtelomeric sequences for both child and mother indicating that no or little chromosomal euchromatic material has been deleted. These findings indicate that ring chromosome 8 without loss of subtelomeric sequences can be inherited and that carriers in a same family present with cognitive function ranging from mild mental retardation to normal intelligence.
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6/23. Fibrochondrogenesis.

    Fibrochondrogenesis is a rare lethal short-limb skeletal dysplasia. Till now only fifteen cases have been reported since Lazzaroni-Fossati first described it in 1978. Hence reported a case of fibrochondrogenesis in a child born to a consanguineously married couple with characteristic physical and radiological features and discuss the incidence, inheritance, ultrasonographic, clinical, radiological and pathological characteristics of this disorder.
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7/23. Clinical outcome and follow-up of the first reported case of Russell-silver syndrome with the unique combination of maternal uniparental heterodisomy 7 and mosaic trisomy 7.

    BACKGROUND: Russell-silver syndrome (RSS) has been associated with maternal uniparental disomy (UPD) for chromosome 7 although the etiology of the syndrome is still unknown. Cases of RSS associated with maternal UPD7 have involved isodisomies, heterodisomies, and mixed isodisomy with heterodisomy simultaneously. This publication is a follow-up report of the postnatal clinical outcome of the first prenatally suspected case of combined mosaic trisomy 7 with maternal uniparental disomy of chromosome 7 (UPD7). CASE: The diagnosis of RSS in the proband was suspected prenatally because trisomy 7 mosaicism (47,XX, 7[13]/46,XX[19]) and maternal uniparental heterodisomy 7 were both found in amniotic fluid cells. Cord blood karyotype analysis showed only disomic cells (46,XX[50]), whereas postpartum chorionic villus analysis was completely trisomic for chromosome 7 (47,XX, 7[19]). Postnatally, the diagnosis of RSS was confirmed by physical findings, her trisomy 7 mosaicism was confirmed by cytogenetic analysis of her skin biopsy (47,XX, 7[9]/46,XX[20]) and her UPD7 was confirmed on both peripheral blood and skin biopsy using microsatellite markers. During infancy, the proband experienced growth deficiency, persistent hypoglycemia, and psychomotor developmental delay. CONCLUSIONS: Trisomic rescue as a life-saving mechanism, with subsequent chromosomal mosaicism in combination with UPD may occur more frequently in RSS than has been reported. Systematic testing of cases suspected prenatally or postnatally would be informative regarding the individual contribution of each factor. Imprinting, loss of heterozygosity for recessive genes, and mosaicism may explain the short stature, asymmetry, and the variable expression of the phenotype. The contribution of these mechanisms to the syndrome should be evaluated in these cases.
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8/23. Delineation of the costello syndrome.

    We present a 15-year-old girl with mental retardation, short stature, coarse face, unusually thick, loose skin of the hands and feet, deep plantar and palmar creases, and nasal papillomata. Her history and physical findings are compared to those of 2 children initially reported by Costello and to 1 child recently reported by Der Kaloustian et al.
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9/23. Leprechaunism: in vitro insulin action despite genetic insulin resistance.

    We recently identified a female leprechaun infant with marked hyperinsulinemia [as high as 10,975 microU/ml (78,746 pmol/liter)], presumably secondary to insulin resistance. She had two physical findings suggestive of possible insulin action: cystic ovarian enlargement with gonadotropin-independent steroid secretion and persistent, severe myocardial hypertrophy. To examine the pathophysiology of this disorder we measured the in vitro sensitivity to insulin and other growth factors of erythroid progenitors and a T-lymphoblast cell line derived from her peripheral blood. Resistance to insulin was demonstrated by failure of her circulating erythroid progenitor cells to augment proliferation in response to physiologic concentrations of insulin (1-10 ng/ml). An immortalized T lymphoblast cell line was established by transforming the cells with the human retrovirus human T cell leukemia virus II. This cell line showed little or no response to physiologic concentrations of insulin contrary to consistently observed stimulation of colony formation by cell lines similarly derived from normals. The patient's T lymphoblasts, however, showed normal sensitivity to insulin-like growth factor i. In response to supraphysiologic insulin concentrations (25-1000 ng/ml), leprechaun T lymphoblasts showed significant augmentation of colony formation (peak 189% above baseline at 50 ng/ml); normal T lymphoblasts also showed responsiveness at these high insulin concentrations. Preincubation with a monoclonal antibody against the insulin-like growth factor i receptor (alpha IR-3 at 5000 ng/ml) blocked the in vitro effect of physiologic concentrations of insulin-like growth factor and supraphysiologic concentrations of insulin on leprechaun and control T lymphoblast colony formation, but had no clear effect upon the response to physiologic insulin concentrations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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10/23. trisomy for the distal third of the long arm of chromosome 19 in brother and sister.

    trisomy for the distal third of the long arm of chromosome 19 was observed in a 12-year-old boy and his 9-year-old sister. Both are affected by extremely severe statural and psychomotor retardation. The physical symptoms common to both are dwarfism, micro- and brachycephaly, antimongoloid slant of the eyes, hypertelorism, ptosis, short nose, short philtrum, poorly formed ears, short neck with excess skin, barrel-shaped thorax, diastasis of rectus muscles, kyphosis, sacral dimple, excess of digital arches, pedes valgi, laterally curved big toes, epilepsy and muscular hypotonia. The chromosomal anomaly was transmitted by the mother, who is the carrier of a translocation t(19;20)(19q133;20pter). In the pedigree, extending over four generations, among 30 pregnancies fathered or mothered by 5 carriers resulted in: 6 individuals with normal karyotype, 9 carriers, 2 confirmed and 2 presumptive unbalanced abnormal children, and 10 abortions.
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