HCV infection incidence in the Swiss HIV Cohort Study was mainly associated with IDU. In HIV-infected MSM, HCV infection was associated with unsafe sex.
KBG syndrome is a multiple congenital anomaly (MCA) syndrome comprising developmental delay, postnatal short stature, and delayed bone age. Many physical anomalies involving the face, hands, and costovertebral axis have been described in this syndrome. We present twin males with KBG syndrome and a review of 50 published case reports, with particular emphasis on the neurological aspects of KBG syndrome, including seizures, MRI findings, and behavior difficulties. It is argued that diagnostic criteria for KBG syndrome should include neurological involvement, that is, global developmental delay, seizures, and/or mental retardation (MR). The characteristic facial changes and representative hand and costovertebral anomalies are also defined. These diagnostic criteria were obtained from 50 publications and appeared to support the diagnosis in 43 cases. They will be helpful to pediatricians, geneticists, and neurologists in evaluating patients for this condition.
Mowat-Wilson syndrome (MWS) is a relatively newly described multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation syndrome. Haploinsufficiency of a gene termed ZFHX1B (also known as SIP1) on chromosome 2 is responsible for this condition, and clinical genetic testing for MWS recently became available. The majority of reports in the literature originate from Northern Europe and Australia. Here we report our clinical experience with 12 patients diagnosed with MWS within a 2-year period of time in the United States, with particular emphasis on clinical characteristics and management strategies. Individuals with this condition have characteristic facial features, including microcephaly, hypertelorism, medially flared and broad eyebrows, prominent columella, pointed chin, and uplifted earlobes, which typically prompt the clinician to consider the diagnosis. Medical issues in our cohort of patients included seizures (75%) with no predeliction for any particular seizure type; agenesis of the corpus callosum (60% of our patients studied); congenital heart defects (75%), particularly involving the pulmonary arteries and/or valves; hypospadias (55% of males); severely impaired or absent speech (100% of individuals over 1 year of age) with relatively spared receptive language; and Hirschsprung disease (50%) or chronic constipation (25%). The incidence of MWS is unknown, but based on the number of patients identified in a short period of time within the US, it is likely greatly under recognized. MWS should be considered in any individual with severely impaired or absent speech, especially in the presence of seizures and anomalies involving the pulmonary arteries (particularly pulmonary artery sling) or pulmonary valves.
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