Hydrocephalus due to aqueductal stenosis (HSAS; Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man #307000) is a rare X-linked, recessively-inherited disease characterized by severe hydrocephaly and occasionally adducted thumbs, in addition to intellectual disability and spasticity in surviving individuals. The present study described two fetuses with severely enlarged ventricles of the brain. The clinical diagnosis of HSAS was made on the basis of family history and sonographic findings. Molecular testing of the L1 cell adhesion molecule (L1CAM) gene revealed two novel hemizygous L1CAM variants, c.998C>T(p.Pro333Leu) and c.2362G>T(p.Val788Phe). The variants affect the highly conserved amino acids which are located in the key domains of the protein (the fourth Ig domain and second FnIII domain, respectively). The two variants were predicted to be 'disease causing' by a number of prediction tools, and have been classified as likely pathogenic following the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics/Association for Molecular Pathology guidelines. The present study highlights the importance of combining family history, prenatal ultrasonography and molecular testing in the diagnosis of HSAS. The novel variants expand the mutational spectrum of L1CAM gene in the Chinese population, and could be used in genetic counseling, carrier testing of female relatives, and prenatal, as well as preimplantation genetic diagnosis.
We report a case in which Berry syndrome is diagnosed by fetal echocardiography. Fetal echocardiography showed that the ascending aorta, main pulmonary artery, left pulmonary artery, and right pulmonary artery were presented as a vascular complexity in the three vessels and pulmonary arterial branches view.
Objective This study aimed to explore the correlation between the ultrasound phenotype and copy number variation (CNV) of abnormal embryos in spontaneous abortion by investigating the abnormal chromosome copy number of embryos at different developmental stages in early spontaneous abortion. Methods A total of 539 patients who had early spontaneous abortion in our hospital between 2015 and 2019 were divided into seven groups according to the phenotype of abnormal embryonic development during pregnancy, and the embryonic tissues of the patients were subjected by single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) microarray. Results Among 377 cases with abnormal CNV, 295 (78.25%) cases had chromosome trisomy, and 28 (7.43%) cases had a combination of more than two chromosomes. Triploidy, tetraploidy, chromosome microdeletion/duplication, uniparental disomy, and monosomy 45,X were found in 32 (8.48%), five (1.32%), 31 (8.22%), four (1.02%), and eight (2.12%) cases, respectively. Two (0.53%) cases had autosomal chromosome 21 monosomy. Normal karyotype had the highest proportion in the empty sac group; trisomy 16 accounted for the bulk of chromosomes in the normal yolk sac group, complex triploidy occupied the most part in the abnormal yolk sac group, and no remarkable difference in chromosomal abnormality proportion was found between the normal and abnormal yolk sac groups; the most frequent chromosomal anomaly in a group of germ without cardiac activity and germ<5 mm was trisomy 16; triploidy was the most common in the group with 5 mm ≤ germ ≤ 15 mm, whereas the main distribution of chromosome karyotype was normal, followed by trisomy 13 in a group with germ>15 mm. Conclusion Abnormal embryos with different ultrasound phenotypes in early spontaneous abortion have various CNV types and characteristic distribution. Thus, ultrasound combined with SNP array can provide a basis for the etiological analysis of embryos in spontaneous abortion.
Pulmonary atresia with ventricular septal defect (PA-VSD) is a rare complex congenital heart defect. Major artery-pulmonary collateral arteries (MAPCAs) are characteristic of PA-VSD. Prenatal diagnosis can be achieved in most cases of PA-VSD with recent advances in echocardiography. However, it is extremely rare that all MAPCAs can be observed on the echocardiograph. Here, we report a case of prenatally diagnosed type C PA-VSD in which all the MAPCAs could be seen on the echocardiograph, with the diagnosis supported by autopsy evidence.
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