Acampomelic campomelic syndrome
โ Scribed by Moog, Ute ;Jansen, N.J.G. ;Scherer, G. ;Schrander-Stumpel, C.T.R.M.
- Book ID
- 101442784
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 410 KB
- Volume
- 104
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0148-7299
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โฆ Synopsis
Campomelic syndrome (or campomelic dysostosis, CD; MIM *114290) is an autosomal dominant skeletal malformation syndrome characterized by shortness and bowing of long bones, especially of the lower limbs. Additional radiological and clinical ยฎndings are 11 pairs of ribs and a bell-shaped thorax, hypoplastic scapulae, narrow iliac wings, non-mineralized thoracic pedicles, clubbed feet, Robin sequence, typical facial anomalies and tracheomalacia. The disorder is frequently lethal due to respiratory distress. Sex reversal occurs in most patients with an XY karyotype. CD is caused by heterozygous mutations in the SOX9 gene, an SRY-related gene at 17q24.3ยฑq25.1 with pleiotropic effects on the skeletal and genital systems. In addition, cases with chromosomal rearrangements involving 17q have been described that are most likely caused by disturbing one or more cis-regulatory elements from an extended control region. Campomelia (bowed limbs) is seen in most but not all patients, deยฎning a so-called acampomelic campomelic dysostosis (ACD). Half of the CD cases with 17q rearrangements have no or mild campomelia. Furthermore, campomelia is absent or only mildly present in a small subgroup of cases with a normal karyotype. We present a chromosomally normal boy with ACD and his clinical follow-up up to the age of 2 years, in whom a heterozygous SOX9 missense mutation (H165Y) was identiยฎed. A SOX9 missense mutation was published in two other patients with ACD. Although up to now a general genotype-phenotype correlation could not be established for CD, a correlation emerges for the ACD variant that needs further conยฎrmation.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Acampomelic campomelic dysplasia (ACD) is a rare genetic syndrome affecting bone and connective tissue. This syndrome is a variant of the more commonly encountered campomelic dysplasia but is characterized by the absence of long bone curvature (acampomelia). Affected children have a characteristical
We report on 4 patients with the campomelic syndrome (CS) in whom postmortem angiog raphy of the lower limbs was performed. Of the 4 patients, 3 were phenotypic females (2 of them with a 46,XY karyotype) and one was a male with a normal 46,XY karyotype. Three fulfilled the criteria of CS, and one (p