We reviewed 45 patients with a deletion of the long arm of chromosome 4. Forty-one were previous reports (25 terminal deletions and 16 interstitial deletions) and 4 are new cases with terminal deletions. Of the 29 patients with terminal deletions, 18 with deletion at 4q31 and 4 at 4q32----qter had an identifiable phenotype consisting of abnormal skull shape, hypertelorism, cleft palate, apparently low-set abnormal pinnae, short nose with abnormal bridge, virtually pathognomonic pointed fifth finger and nail, congenital heart and genitourinary defects, moderate-severe mental retardation, poor postnatal growth, and hypotonia. Six patients with a deletion at 4q33 and one patient with deletion 4q34 were less severely affected. In general, patients with various interstitial deletions proximal to 4q31 had a phenotype that was less specific, although mental retardation and minor craniofacial anomalies were also present. There were 3 patients with piebaldism and one with Rieger syndrome. We conclude that terminal deletion of chromosome 4q (4q31----qter) appears to produce a distinctive malformation (MCA/MR) syndrome in which the phenotype correlates with the amount of chromosome material missing and which differs from the more variable phenotype associated with interstitial deletions of 4q.
Our finding of chromosome mosaicism with a ring 22 in a retarded black boy with hypomelanosis of Ito prompted a review of this "syndrome." Most patients have a variety of non-dermal defects, particularly those affecting CNS function. Among karyotyped patients, most are chromosome mosaics of one sort or another. Hypomelanosis of Ito turns out to be a causable non-specific phenotype, i.e., a clinical marker for chromosome mosaicism of all different types in individuals with a dark enough skin to show lighter patches. Consequently, cytogenetic evaluation is indicated in all patients with this skin finding.
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