We constructed the standard growth (length/height and weight) curves for Japa-nese individuals with Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS). Crude height and weight data were collected from 153 males and 99 females with the syndrome, and the collected data were arranged by a mathematical method to construct the curves. Height growth patterns were quite different between PWS and normal children. Mean height of individuals with the syndrome by puberty is −2 SD for normal children, and it drops off far below −2 SD value after puberty. Final mean height is 141.2 ± 4.8 cm for females (n = 13) and 147.7 ± 7.7 cm for males (n = 17), showing 15.8 and 21.9 cm below the average height for normal Japanese girls and boys, respectively. Thus, the degree of shortness is more pronounced in male than in female patients. There was no difference in height between those with chromosome 15q deletion and those without. Mean weight at birth of girls (n = 88) and boys (n = 131) were 2.70 ± 0.45 Kg and 2.62 ± 0.47 Kg, respectively. These values were smaller than those for normal neonates (P < 0.05, t-test). The weight of PWS children was under the mean value for normal infants by age 2 years, but gradually increase above the mean values for normal children around ages 2-4 years. Overweight in both males and females becomes obvious during prepu-berty. Growth patterns are not different between Japanese and Caucasian children with the syndrome. Short stature is more prominent in boys of both ethnic groups, whereas the degree of overweight appears much more severe in Caucasians. Am. J. Med. Genet. 95:130-134, 2000.
A previously reported autopsy case of eosinophilic coronary periarteritis (ECPA, or isolated eosinophilic coronary periarteritis, IECPA), and an additional six autopsy cases of ECPA are reported. In addition, another four autopsy cases of ECPA reported in the literature are discussed. Fifteen cases of ECPA with spontaneous coronary dissection (hematoma), which appeared in the literature from 1987 to 2011, are also reviewed. The characteristic clinico-pathological findings of ECPA are: (a) variant angina (Prinzmetal's vasospastic angina) appeared mainly from evening to early in the morning; (b) allergy or allergic history could be identified in only three of a total of 11 cases; (c) sudden unexpected death (sudden cardiac death) usually occurred early in the morning; (d) eosinophilic inflammation limited to the adventitia and periadventitial soft issue appeared in the epicardial large coronary arteries, chiefly in the left coronary anterior descending artery; (e) fibrinoid necrosis or granuloma could not be found in or around the inflammatory area; (f) no type of vasculitis could be found in any other tissues or organs (i.e., localized and non-systemic periarteritis); (g) ECPA was frequently accompanied by spontaneous coronary arterial dissection (SCAD) in the affected wall; and (h) ECPA without SCAD appeared mainly in men (male/female ratio was 8:3), while EPCA with SCAD appeared in almost all female cases (male/female ratio was 1:14). Although the etiology and pathogenesis are still unknown, we believe that ECPA (with or without SCAD) might be a distinct new type of coronary arteritis.
We report a 4-year-old boy, a 6-month-old girl, and a 17-week-old fetus all with a chromosomal imbalance derived from a balanced translocation t(13;15)(q34;q26.1) of their father. The boy had a partial trisomy for 15q26.1-qter (46,XY,der(13)t(13;15)(q34;q26.1)) and postnatal overgrowth, as well as craniosynostosis, facial anomalies, and finger joint contractures, while the girl with the same chromosomal aberration did not show overgrowth, although she had similar craniofacial and skeletal abnormalities. The fetus had a partial monosomy for 15q26.1-qter and intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR). Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis with a BAC clone covering the insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor gene (IGF1R) that is located to 15q25-q26 revealed three copies in the boy, one copy in the fetus, and two copies in their phenotypically normal father. Since deletion of IGF1Rhas repeatedly been reported to be associated with IUGR, it is tempting to speculate that the dosage of IGF1R may have determined growth in these children.
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