The results of linkage analysis in a family with X-linked retinitis pigmentosa (XLRP) are presented. Probe M27B (DXS255), localized to Xp11.22, was only loosely linked to XLRP, whereas pHOC3 (OTC), in the more distal Xp21.1 region, was tightly linked. In this family, the conditional probability of an RP3 locus (in Xp21.1-p11.4) was found to be 0.978 compared with 0.021 for an RP2 locus (in Xp11.4-p11.2). Risk assessment showed that 2 out of 4 "at risk" females showing no clinical abnormality have a high probability of being genetic carriers of XLRP. Some affected males have recurrent respiratory infections as a result of a condition indistinguishable from the immotile cilia syndrome; indeed, there is an association between XLRP and susceptibility to respiratory infections in the majority of affected males. The possibility that previously observed ciliary abnormalities in XLRP patients might be associated specifically with an RP3 locus abnormality is discussed.
Six cases of Kabuki syndrome (KS) with ocular anomalies are reported and the variety of ocular features reported in the literature for this syndrome is described. Routine ocular examinations are recommended for every patient with KS because of the high proportion of ocular anomalies found in these patients, the presence of which can hamper development if not adequately addressed.
The effect of the synthetic vasopressin derivative 1-desamino-8D-arginine vasopressin (DDAVP = desmopressin) on bleeding time was studied in three patients with Hermansky Pudlak syndrome. A good response was observed in this type of storage pool disease. DDAVP might be useful in managing the bleeding disorder found in patients with the Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome.
A severely retarded male child with Joubert syndrome is described. He had severe neurological anomalies including Dandy-Walker malformation, hypoplasia of the corpus callosum, occipital meningo-encephalocele, and bilateral coloboma of the optic nerve with retrobulbar cystic mass. This is the first male described so far with both coloboma and other midline defects. A detailed autopsy on an affected female fetus from the mother's second pregnancy is presented.
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