57 research outputs found

    Short rib polydactyly syndrome type III: Histopathogenesis of the skeletal phenotype

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    A morphological study of the skeletal system in a case of short rib polydactyly syndrome type III (SRPS-III) documented a "bajonet" deformity of the ribs for misalignment and overlap of cartilaginous and bony ends. This deformity resulted from a 'tandem' change in endochondral bone formation that is, arrested orthotopic cartilage maturation and etherotopic perichondral cartilage differention and ossification. At the cartilaginous end, cartilage maturation and vascular invasion were absent. At the bony end, longitudinal bone growth occurred by a perichondral ectopic growth plate. 'Miniature' versions of this 'tandem' change were also demonstrated in the long bones of the limbs and included focally arrested orthotopic cartilage maturation at the growth plates, perichondral cartilage differentiation, and ossification within cartilage canals. Our morphological study indicates that a generalized loss of syncrony in cartilage removal and osteogenic differentiation occurs in all growth plates, albeit with varied expressivity, and represents, at tissue level, the mechanism by which the SRPS-III skeletal phenotype develops

    Conservative management of cervicomediastinal chyloma in an infant

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    The accumulation of chyle into the mediastinum after surgical intervention is considered an extremely rare event, which has been previously described only in adulthood. We report on a 9-month-old boy who developed a cervicomediastinal chyloma after excision of a large left-sided supraclavicular cystic hygroma. Notwithstanding considerable tracheal deviation, the infant remained asymptomatic and was successfully treated by nonoperative treatment. Professionals should be aware of such as unusual condition, which may benefit from expectant management when evaluation establishes a high likelihood of clinical diagnosis, and patient's general condition remains stable. This approach may avoid, with little risk, unnecessary early surgical intervention in some of these patients. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved

    Pigmentary Mosaicism, Subcortical Band Heterotopia, and Brain Cystic Lesions

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    A 10-year-old boy presented with a severe and diffuse mosaic skin hypopigmentation running (in narrow bands) along the lines of Blaschko associated with mosaic areas of alopecia, facial dysmorphism with midface hypoplasia, bilateral punctate cataract, microretrognathia, short neck, pectus excavatum, joint hypermobility, mild muscular hypotonia, generalized seizures, and mild mental retardation. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging revealed hypoplastic corpus callosum (primarily posterior), subcortical band heterotopia, and diffuse subcortical, periventricular cystic-like lesions. Similar dysmorphic features were observed in the child's mother, but with no imaging abnormalities. The facial phenotype coupled with the cysts in the brain was strongly reminiscent of the oculocerebrorenal Lowe syndrome. Full chromosome studies in the parents and the proband and mutation analysis on peripheral blood lymphocytes (and on skin cultured fibroblasts from affected and unaffected skin areas in the child) in the genes for subcortical band heterotopia (DCX (Xq22.3 similar to q23)], lissencephaly (PAFAH1B1, alias LIS1, at 17p13.3), and oculocerebrorenal syndrome of Lowe (OCRL at Xq23 similar to q24)] were unrevealing. This constellation of multiple congenital anomalies including ski

    VACTERL association and maternal diabetes: A possible causal relationship?

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    BACKGROUND: Some factors(s)/features(s) of maternal insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus are considered common human teratogens. Although the variable association of cardiac, renal, and skeletal anomalies are commonly observed in infants from diabetic mothers, the relationship between VACTERL (i.e., the association of vertebral and cardiac defects, tracheo-esophageal fistula, renal/radial malformations, and other limb anomalies) and maternal diabetes has not been sufficiently emphasized in the literature. CASE: We report on a 3-year-old boy presenting with a constellation of blastogenetic malformations strongly suggestive of VACTERL association. His mother was affected by insulin-dependent diabetes since she was 7 years old and pregnancy history disclosed very high glucose and HbA1c levels, especially during the first 2 gestational months. CONCLUSIONS: In an attempt to properly counsel the parents, we reviewed the literature and identified four additional patients with VACTERL and first trimester exposure to maternal diabetes mellitus. Although this evidence does not strongly support a causal relationship between these two conditions, additional arguments may substantiate this hypothesis. The pathogenesis of diabetic embryopathy in relation to the VACTERL phenotype is also discussed
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