“…There have been at least 19 cases of trisomy11q reported previously due to translocations with chromosomes other than 22: 2q37 [Lurie et al, 1979], 3p26/27 [Bader et al, 1978; Ridler and McKeown, 1979], 4q35 [Francke et al, 1977; Pihko et al, 1981], 5p15 [Mann and Rafferty, 1972; Mutchinick et al, 1988; Wallerstein et al, 1992], 6q27 [Francke et al, 1977], 8q24 [Noir et al, 1987], 9p [Greig et al, 1985], 10q26 [Tusques et al, 1972], 13p13 [Smeets et al, 1997], 13q32 [Rott et al, 1972], 17p13 [Laurent et al, 1975], 18p11 [de France et al, 1984; Menendez et al, 1990], 21q22 [Jacobsen et al, 1973], and Yq12 [Takano et al, 1993]. Each of these would result in a partial deletion of another chromosome as well as the partial trisomy 11q.…”