Fucosidosis is a rare, autosomal recessive, lysosomal storage disorder caused by a severe deficiency of alpha-L-fucosidase in all tissues. We have conducted a review of fucosidosis, compiling data from published reports and an international questionnaire survey. Seventy-seven patients affected with fucosidosis of which 19 had not been reported before have been identified. A major aim of the present study was to define the natural history of fucosidosis. The clinical picture of fucosidosis consists of progressive mental (95%) and motor (87%) deterioration, coarse facies (79%), growth retardation (78%), recurrent infections (78%), dysostosis multiplex (58%), angiokeratoma corporis diffusum (52%), visceromegaly (44%), and seizures (38%). Whereas the original fucosidosis patients described by Durand et al. (J. Pediatr 75:665-674, 1969) were decerebrate and died before age 5 years, most fucosidosis patients have a slower course of degeneration. Mortality before age 5 years was observed in only 7 patients (9%), whereas 36 patients (64%) reached the second decade. We did not find evidence for the existence of clinical heterogeneity with a rapidly progressive type I and a slowly progressive type II fucosidosis as suggested in the literature. Instead, there seems to exist a wide continuous clinical spectrum. At the biochemical level no heterogeneity in residual fucosidase enzyme activity or cross-reacting immunoreactive fucosidase protein was observed. At the DNA level at least 4 different mutations must be responsible for fucosidosis. These genotypic differences however do not explain the observed phenotypic differences.
We report here a family in which the fragile X mutation segregates from an affected grandfather through his normal daughter to an affected grandson. The grandson shows clinical and cytogenetic expression of fragile X syndrome due to a full mutation (large methylated insertion) in the fragile X gene (FMR-1). The mother shows a premutation (small unmethylated insertion) in her FMR-1 gene as the sole manifestation of the fragile X syndrome. The grandfather expresses the fragile X syndrome at the clinical and cytogenetic level, whereas he is mosaic for a methylated full mutation and an unmethylated premutation. The absence of expression of the fragile X mutation when transmitted through an expressing male might present further evidence for genomic imprinting of the FMR-1 gene. Alternatively, it is possible that the grandfather transmitted his premutation to his daughter due to germline mosaicism with both the premutation and the full mutation present in his sperm.
We report on a 16-year-old girl with mandibuloacral dysplasia, a rare progeroid syndrome. She presented at age 2 years with thin skin on the limbs, characteristic face with prominent eyes, a pinched nose, micrognathia, and small mouth. Hair was sparse and brittle. The terminal phalanges were hypoplastic and showed acroosteolysis. On follow-up, hands and feet showed progressive camptodactyly of fingers and toes with total loss of subcutaneous tissue. The clavicles were hypoplastic. Intelligence was normal. We review the literature on the subject and discuss differential diagnosis.
We describe a male neonate with severe arachnodactyly, hypermobility of the fingers, flexion contractures of elbows, wrists, hips, and knees, micrognathia, crumpled ears, rockerbottom feet, loose redundant skin, and ocular abnormalities. Severe cardiac valve insufficiency and aortic dilatation resulted in cardiac failure and death 20 hours after birth. This case represents the severe end of the clinical spectum of Marfan syndrome. As similar patients have been reported, they may represent a separate mutation.Marfan syndrome is an autosomal dominant disorder mainly affecting the skeletal system (arachnodactyly, tall stature, anterior chest and vertebral column deformities), the cardiovascular system (dilatation or dissection of the aorta and mitral valve prolapse), and the ocular system (ectopia lentis and myopia).' 2 Beals and Hecht3 noticed that some of their patients with Marfanoid characteristics also showed congenital contractures, and they identified similar patients in published reports, including the original patient
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