Search results for "Chromosome Disorders"

showing 10 items of 29 documents

Further delineation of eye manifestations in homozygous 15q13.3 microdeletions including TRPM1: a differential diagnosis of ceroid lipofuscinosis.

2014

The 15q13.3 heterozygous microdeletion is a fairly common microdeletion syndrome with marked clinical variability and incomplete penetrance. The average size of the deletion, which comprises six genes including CHRNA7, is 1.5 Mb. CHRNA7 has been identified as the gene responsible for the neurological phenotype in this microdeletion syndrome. Only seven patients with a homozygous microdeletion that includes at least CHRNA7, and is inherited from both parents have been described in the literature. The aim of this study was to further describe the distinctive eye manifestations from the analysis in the three French patients diagnosed with the classical 1.5 Mb homozygous microdeletion. Patients…

MalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtygenetic structuresalpha7 Nicotinic Acetylcholine ReceptorEncephalopathyTRPM Cation ChannelsChromosome DisordersBiologyBlindnessEyePupilNeuronal Ceroid-LipofuscinosesNight BlindnessSeizuresIntellectual DisabilityRetinal DystrophiesGeneticsmedicineElectroretinographyMyopiaHumansEye AbnormalitiesChildGenetics (clinical)TRPM1Genetic Association StudiesCongenital stationary night blindnessGeneticsChromosomes Human Pair 15DystrophyEye Diseases HereditaryGenetic Diseases X-LinkedOptic NerveMicrodeletion syndromemedicine.diseasePenetranceChild PreschoolFemalesense organsDifferential diagnosisChromosome DeletionAmerican journal of medical genetics. Part A
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Chromosome 5 abnormalities in acute lymphoblastic leukemia

1991

Abstract We report two cases of acute lymphoblastic leukemia with involvement of chromosome 5. One of them showed a del(5)(q13q33) in a 5-year-old boy who had previously received antineoplastic chemotherapy for an L1-ALL that had been diagnosed nine months before. The other one showed a t(5;7)(q12–13;q36) together with a t(8;14)(q24;q32) and a der(1) in a 66-year-old man with an L3-ALL. Both chromosome 5 aberrations are interpreted as evolutionary events. In the first case, it was secondary to chemotherapy treatment; in the second, an evolutionary chromosome rearrangement, considering the translocation between chromosomes 8 and 14 as the primary cytogenetic event.

MaleCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentLymphoblastic LeukemiaChromosome DisordersChromosomal translocationChromosomal rearrangementBiologyAcute lymphocytic leukemiaAntineoplastic chemotherapyGeneticsmedicineHumansMolecular BiologyChromosome AberrationsChemotherapyCytogeneticsChromosomePrecursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphomamedicine.diseaseChromosome BandingChild PreschoolKaryotypingImmunologyCancer researchChromosomes Human Pair 5Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics
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Two new cases of Thrombocytopenia Absent Radius (TAR) syndrome: Clinical, Genetic and Nosologic Features

1988

Two unrelated children affected by TAR syndrome, autosomic recessive disease with congenital thrombocytopenia and bilateral radial aplasia, are described. In the first case a mild thrombocytopenia has been compatible with a fairly normal life until the second year of age. The other child shows radial aplasia associated with other anomalies of the upper limbs, severe thrombocytopenia and leukemoid reaction. The relationship among TAR syndrome, Fanconi's anemia and Roberts' syndrome are briefly discussed.

Malecongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyEctromeliaAnemiaChromosome DisordersGenes RecessiveRadial aplasiaBiologyConsanguinityBilateral radial aplasiahemic and lymphatic diseasesmedicineClinical geneticHumansAbnormalities MultipleChromosome AberrationsPlatelet CountTAR syndromeInfantSyndromemedicine.diseaseThrombocytopeniaDermatologySevere thrombocytopeniaRadiusPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemaleAbsent radiusLeukemoid reactionKlinische Pädiatrie
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Involvement of the chromosomal region 11q13 in renal oncocytoma: case report and literature review.

1997

Renal oncocytomas comprise a cytogenetically heterogeneous group of tumors consisting potentially of cytogenetic distinguishable subgroups. Review of the literature revealed loss of chromosome 1 and Y as a possible anomaly for at least one subset of oncocytomas. The frequent finding of rearrangements involving chromosome 11 band q13 characterizes another subset of oncocytomas. We report the cytogenetic and pathological features of a renal oncocytoma diagnosed in a 72-year-old woman and found a t(9;11)(p23;q13) as a consistent abnormality. This supports the idea that translocations involving 11q13 define a further subset of oncocytoma. (C) Elsevier Science Inc., 1997.

Cancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyPathologyChromosomes Human Pair 21Chromosomes Human Pair 20Chromosomal translocationChromosome DisordersBiologyurologic and male genital diseasesTranslocation GeneticGeneticsmedicineAdenoma OxyphilicHumansOncocytomaRenal oncocytomaCYTOGENETIC ABNORMALITIESMolecular BiologyAgedGeneticsChromosome AberrationsChromosomes Human Pair 11CytogeneticsChromosomeLOCALIZATIONKaryotypemedicine.diseaseTUMORSGENEKidney NeoplasmsChromosome BandingChromosomal regionFemaleAbnormalityChromosomes Human Pair 9Cancer genetics and cytogenetics
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Desmin-related myopathies

1997

Desmin-related myopathies are marked by accumulation of desmin, which is often familial and associated with cardiomyopathy. When multifocal this excess is characterized by inclusions such as cytoplasmic or spheroid bodies, when disseminated the excess is called granulofilamentous material. Excess of desmin might represent an abnormal type of protein metabolism.

AdultPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyGranulofilamentous materialCardiomyopathyChromosome DisordersGenes Recessivemacromolecular substancesBiologyDesminMuscular DiseasesmedicineHumansChildMuscle SkeletalGenotype-Phenotype CorrelationsGenes DominantChromosome AberrationsInclusion BodiesDESMIN-RELATED MYOPATHYMyocardiumMolecular pathogenesismusculoskeletal systemmedicine.diseaseActin CytoskeletonNeurologyCytoplasmDesminNeurology (clinical)CardiomyopathiesCurrent Opinion in Neurology
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The 2q37-deletion syndrome: an update of the clinical spectrum including overweight, brachydactyly and behavioural features in 14 new patients

2012

International audience; The 2q37 locus is one of the most commonly deleted subtelomeric regions. Such a deletion has been identified in >100 patients by telomeric fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis and, less frequently, by array-based comparative genomic hybridization (array-CGH). A recognizable ‘2q37-deletion syndrome’ or Albright’s hereditary osteodystrophy-like syndrome has been previously described. To better map the deletion and further refine this deletional syndrome, we formed a collaboration with the Association of French Language Cytogeneticists to collect 14 new intellectually deficient patients with a distal or interstitial 2q37 deletion characterized by FISH and …

AdultMaleCandidate geneAdolescentDNA Copy Number Variations[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Chromosome DisordersLocus (genetics)BiologyFibrous Dysplasia PolyostoticBioinformaticsArticleYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineIntellectual DisabilityGeneticsmedicineHumansChildGenetic Association StudiesGenetics (clinical)030304 developmental biologyKIF1AGeneticsBehaviorComparative Genomic Hybridization0303 health sciences[ SDV ] Life Sciences [q-bio]medicine.diagnostic_testBrachydactylyBrachydactylyChromosome MappingOverweightSubtelomeremedicine.disease[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio]Child PreschoolChromosomes Human Pair 2AutismFemaleChromosome Deletion030217 neurology & neurosurgeryComparative genomic hybridizationFluorescence in situ hybridizationEuropean Journal of Human Genetics
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Frontotemporal dementia: the post-tau era.

2006

As scientists have begun to decipher the molecular genetic bases of hereditary frontotemporal dementia (FTD), it has become clear that the biology of these human neurodegenerative diseases has a complexity not previously suspected. FTD has been found to be linked to several chromosomal loci including those in chromosome 9, chromosome 17, and chromosome 3. The article by Guyant-Marechal et al. in this issue of Neurology reports the clinical, pathologic, and molecular characteristics of a form of FTD associated with inclusion body myopathy and Paget disease of the bone observed in members of two families and expands our knowledge on genetically determined FTD.1 The disorder is associated with…

MaleHeterozygoteMultiple Organ FailureDNA Mutational AnalysisChromosome 9Cell Cycle ProteinsChromosome Disorderstau ProteinsBiologyRisk AssessmentMyositis Inclusion BodyExonRisk FactorsValosin Containing ProteinmedicinePrevalenceHumansGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseGeneRetrospective StudiesGeneticsAdenosine TriphosphatasesIncidenceChromosomeSyndromeMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseOsteitis DeformansPhenotypePedigreeChromosome 17 (human)Chromosome 3MutationDementiaFemaleNeurology (clinical)FranceFrontotemporal dementiaNeurology
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Fulminant hepatic failure requiring liver transplantation in 22q13.3 deletion syndrome.

2010

We report on a 4-year-old girl with severe developmental delay, absent speech, and chromosome 22q13.3 deletion (Phelan-McDermid syndrome), karyotype 46,XX.ish del(22)(q13.31qter)(ARSA-,N85A-,SHANK3-). At the age of 3 years, she needed an emergency liver transplantation because of fulminant hepatic failure, most likely caused by hyperacute autoimmune hepatitis triggered by a viral infection. This is the second report of a patient with 22q13.3 deletion and fulminant liver failure. By array-CGH we identified in this patient a 5.675 Mb terminal deletion (22q13.31 --> qter; including approximately 55 genes; from NUP50 to RABL2B) and in the previous patient a 1.535 Mb deletion (22q13.32 --> qter;…

Candidate genemedicine.medical_specialtyFulminantmedicine.medical_treatmentChromosomes Human Pair 22Chromosome DisordersAutoimmune hepatitisDiseaseLiver transplantationGastroenterologyFulminant hepatic failureInternal medicineGeneticsmedicineHumansGenetics (clinical)In Situ Hybridization FluorescenceOligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysisComparative Genomic Hybridizationmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryKaryotypeSyndromeLiver Failure Acutemedicine.diseaseLiver TransplantationChild PreschoolFemaleChromosome DeletionLiver function testsbusinessAmerican journal of medical genetics. Part A
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Congenital hypopituitarism and multiple midline defects in a newborn with non-familial Cat Eye syndrome

2022

Abstract Background Cat eye syndrome (CES) is a rare chromosomal disease, with estimated incidence of about 1 in 100,000 live newborns. The classic triad of iris coloboma, anorectal malformations, and auricular abnormalities is present in 40% of patients, and other congenital defects may also be observed. The typical associated cytogenetic anomaly relies on an extra chromosome, derived from an inverted duplication of short arm and proximal long arm of chromosome 22, resulting in partial trisomy or tetrasomy of such regions (inv dup 22pter-22q11.2). Case presentation We report on a full-term newborn, referred to us soon after birth. Physical examination showed facial dysmorphisms, including …

Chromosome Aberrations...CholestasisHydrocortisoneCongenital hypopituitarismSupernumerary marker chromosomeChromosomes Human Pair 22Chromosome DisordersGeneral MedicineCESAneuploidyChromosome AberrationHypoglycemiaHypopituitarismColobomaEye AbnormalitieChromosome DisorderCholestasiCase reportHumansFemaleEye AbnormalitiesNeonatal hypoglycemiaItalian Journal of Pediatrics
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Autosomal recessive micrencephaly with simplified gyral pattern, abnormal myelination and arthrogryposis.

1999

The clinical courses, neuroimaging and muscle biopsy findings of two infants born to an inbred Arab family are described. They had a syndrome of micrencephaly with simplified gyral pattern, abnormal myelin formation and arthrogryposis. Increased variation of fiber size was seen in the muscle biopsy, creatine kinase, however was normal. Large areas of muscle were replaced by adipofibrous tissue. The infants had dysmorphic features consistent with the fetal akinesia/hypokinesia sequence. The abnormalities were suggestive of microlissencephaly probably associated with a dysgenetic process in the muscles. The syndrome showed an autosomal recessive inheritance.

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyMicrocephalyLissencephalyChromosome DisordersGenes RecessiveCentral nervous system diseaseConsanguinityHypokinesiaBiopsymedicineHumansMuscle SkeletalMyelin SheathArthrogryposisArthrogryposisChromosome AberrationsMuscle biopsymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryInfant NewbornBrainInfantGeneral MedicineAnatomySyndromemedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingMicrencephalyPedigreeSpinal CordPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthMicrocephalyFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessFollow-Up StudiesNeuropediatrics
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