This white infant, born at 37 weeks of gestation, had a large cranium, bilateral anophthalmia, a midline cleft lip and palate, hypoplastic chest with short ribs, slightly protuberant abdomen, short limbs, bilateral single transverse palmar creases, a single umbilical artery, normal female external genitalia, normal (46 XY) chromosomes, and radiographic findings suggesting a short-rib (polydactyly) syndrome type IV (Beemer-Langer). Autopsy showed pulmonary hypoplasia, bilateral renal cystic dysplasia, intrahepatic bile duct cysts with periportal fibrosis, pancreatic cysts, absent internal genitalia, an atrophic optic chiasm, absent optic nerves, a single left anterior cerebral artery, polymicrogyria, and fusion of the frontal lobes, preoptic region, mammillary bodies, and thalami.
A preterm black girl was born at 35 weeks of gestation to a healthy nonconsanguineous couple. She had a very short trunk with disproportionately long extremities, mild prognathism, low-set ears, thoracolumbar meningomyelocele, and imperforate anus. She died 45 min after birth. Roentgenograms revealed hemivertebrae, block vertebrae, severe thoracic lordosis, absent sacrum, posterior fusion of some ribs with greater distance among them in the anterior thorax, and relatively long extremities. Internal examination showed an intact meningomyelocele extending from the first thoracic vertebra to the lumbosacral region, containing 150 mL of clear fluid. The lungs were severely hypoplastic. Spondylocostal dysostosis encompasses a spectrum of vertebral abnormalities ranging from spina bifida occulta to large meningomyelocele and from mild to severe thoracic deformities that produce pulmonary hypoplasia and respiratory insufficiency. Our case is one of the most severe ever described.
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