We report on 20 Brazilian patients (11 sporadic and 9 familial cases) with the ectrodactyly, ectodermal dysplasia, clefting syndrome (EEC syndrome). Genetic aspects, clinical manifestations, and differential diagnosis of the syndromes involving ectodermal dysplasia/limb anomalies and cleft lip/palate are discussed.
We report on a Brazilian girl, born to consanguineous parents and presenting a multiple congenital anomaly (MCA) syndrome, mainly characterized by blepharophimosis, cleft palate, and arachnodactyly. The clinical aspects involving this patient suggest an apparently undescribed "new" autosomal recessive syndrome.
We report on a Brazilian girl born to consanguineous parents and presenting with craniosynostosis, telecanthus, blepharophimosis, blepharoptosis, epicanthus inversus, cleft lip and palate, skeletal defects, and hearing loss. This combination of anomalies appears to constitute the Michels syndrome.
We have evaluated 25 patients (14 isolated and 11 familial cases) with the EEC syndrome for genitourinary (GU) tract anomalies through intravenous pyelogram (IVP), voiding urethrocystography, and sonographic examination. Fifty-two percent of the patients (7 isolated and 6 familial cases) had involvement of the urinary tract, with no significant difference between isolated and familial cases. The present data seem to reflect the best estimate of the prevalence of genitourinary anomalies in patients with the EEC syndrome.
We report on four Brazilian patients with, among other signs, cleft lip and palate, dental anomalies, ectropion of the lower eyelids, euryblepharon, and lagophthalmia. Two were sporadic cases and two were familial cases, a mother and her equally affected son. Recently, the reports with different combination of these signs were reviewed by Gorlin et al. [1996; Am J Med Genet 65:109-112] and named blepharocheilo-dontic (BCD) syndrome. Variable expressivity and autosomal dominant inheritance were observed.
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