6533b7d9fe1ef96bd126cc5f

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Van der Woude syndrome- a syndromic form of orofacial clefting

N. VijayalaxmiR. Lavanya ReddyR Sudhakara ReddyLingam Amara SwapnaT Rajesh SinghT. Ramesh

subject

Pediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyOral Medicine and Pathologybusiness.industryClinical appearanceOdontologíaCase Reportmedicine.disease:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]PenetranceCiencias de la saludstomatognathic diseasesMale patientUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASEtiologyMedicineVan der Woude syndromeDifferential diagnosisbusinessGeneral Dentistry

description

Van der Woude Syndrome is the most common form of syndromic orofacial clefting, accounting for 2% of all cases, and has the phenotype that most closely resembles the more common non-syndromic forms. The syndrome has an autosomal dominant hereditary pattern with variable expressivity and a high degree of penetrance with cardinal clinical features of lip pits with a cleft lip, cleft palate, or both. This case report describes van der Woude syndrome in a 19 year old male patient with a specific reference to the various aspects of this condition, as clinical appearance, etiological factors (genetic aspects), differential diagnosis, investigative procedures and management. Key words:Cleft palate, cleft lip, lip pits, van der Woude syndrome, syndromic clefting.

10.4317/jced.50559http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3908796