We report on a mildly abnormal 5-year-old girl with seizures, psychomotor retardation, and areas of hyperpigmentation who had a supernumerary marker chromosome in fibroblasts which was identified as an i(5p). To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of tetrasomy 5p. She shares in common some, but not all, manifestations of the dup (5p) syndrome. Cytogenetic analysis of relatives showed that the phenotypically apparently normal mother, maternal grandmother, and a brother of the proband also had a marker chromosome in their lymphocytes which was unrelated to the i(5p).
We report a case of Pallister-Killian syndrome initially diagnosed prenatally as tetrasomy 21. A 33-year-old primiparous woman was noted at 24 weeks' gestation to have moderate polyhydramnios. Ultrasonography showed diminished fetal stomach filling, hydronephrosis, and prominence of the cisterna magna. Cytogenetic analysis of cultured amniocytes was initially interpreted as mosaic tetrasomy 21: 46,XX/47,XX,+i(21q). The patient was then referred to our centre for genetic counselling. At 34 weeks' gestation, a dysmorphic infant was delivered and died within 30 min. Physical features were consistent with the Pallister-Killian syndrome. Renal, gastrointestinal, and central nervous system anomalies were found at post-mortem examination. Analysis of peripheral lymphocytes revealed 5 per cent of cells with a marker chromosome, while 92 per cent of cultured fibroblasts had this same marker. Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) using an alpha-satellite probe for chromosomes 13 and 21 failed to hybridize to the marker, while a chromosome 12 centromeric probe unequivocally identified it as an i(12p). Use of FISH can provide rapid, specific prenatal diagnosis of ambiguous marker chromosomes and improve prenatal counselling.
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