We report on a patient with multiple congenital anomalies and ring chromosome 22 who died at age 16 years of bronchopneumonia. Autopsy documented multiple psammomatous meningiomas of the spinal dura and tentorium. Tumor tissue for cytogenetic analysis was not available. Although abnormalities of chromosome 22 in tumor tissue have been reported, to our knowledge, this is only the third report of a constitutional chromosome 22 abnormality associated with the development of meningiomas. Thus, a constitutional chromosome 22 abnormality may predispose to the development of meningiomas.
Mesomelic dysplasia is a form of short-limb dwarfism characterized by disproportionate shortness of the middle segment of all limbs. Included in this category of skeletal disorders is the Nievergelt syndrome, which typically manifests a rhomboidal shape of the tibiae and fibulae, an unusual foot deformity, radioulnar synostosis, and dysplasia of the elbow and knee joints. We describe a patient with mesomelic dysplasia with findings suggestive of the Nievergelt syndrome and with absence of fibulae and hexadactyly.
Larsen syndrome is a heterogeneous (autosomal dominant or recessive) disorder of characteristic facial changes, multiple joint dislocations, and bone deformities. Few data on the adult presentation of the recessive form of this disorder have been reported; thus, we set out to describe two sibs thought to be affected with autosomal recessive Larsen syndrome who were evaluated as infants and later as adults. Aside from secondary joint changes and the presence of cataracts, changes described in children with autosomal recessive Larsen syndrome were noted. Three years after evaluation, the sister gave birth to a daughter with Larsen syndrome. This occurrence raises the possibility of germ-line mosaicism as the mode of inheritance in this family. Thus, germ-line mosaicism must be considered in the genetic counseling of families with Larsen syndrome in which neither parent appears affected. These patients also illustrate that despite the severe skeletal and joint deformities, the prognosis can be good with careful orthopedic management.
Trisomy 12 mosaicism was found in about 15 per cent of cultured amniocytes obtained from a 32-year-old white female at 17.6 weeks of gestation. Termination of pregnancy was elected and multiple tissues were obtained for chromosome analysis. Of 158 cells examined, only 1 cell in placenta was found with an extra number 12 chromosome. Pathological examination of the fetus did not reveal significant physical abnormalities. This report illustrates the difficulty of confirming trisomy 12 mosaicism which has been detected on prenatal diagnosis. The presence of trisomy 12 in one placental cell obtained from the curettage specimen suggests the possibility of confined placental mosaicism in this case.
Cytogenetic analysis of the products of conception in a pregnancy at risk for Bloom's syndrome (BS) documented the karyotype 49,XX, +2, +8, +11. Autosomal triple trisomy has previously been reported in abortuses but is exceedingly rare. Other interesting but previously unreported observations made during the present study were the following: BS in a Brazilian individual, the first instance of BS diagnosed in South America; transmission of the BS mutation in Jews that are non-Ashkenazi; a medulloblastoma in the propositus, the first malignant brain tumor reported in BS; and, as in all previously examined pregnancies at risk for BS, non-homozygosity for the BS mutation.
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