“…After the application of these techniques, the authors were able to exclude classical PWS, i.e., the syndrome caused by deficiency on 15q11-q13. They investigated further and discovered other mutations that could be associated with the PW-like phenotype, such as: a molecular pattern compatible with Angelman's syndrome (De Molfetta et al, 2002); chromosome 14 maternal uniparental disomy (Hosoki et al, 2009); monosomy of 1p36 (Tsuyusaki et al, 2010); deletion of 6q (Izume et al, 2013), 2pter deletion (Doco-Fenzy et al, 2013); and 10q26 deletion (Lukusa and Fryns, 2000); paracentric inversion (X)(q26q28) (Florez et al, 2003); 12q subtelomere deletions (Niyazov et al, 2007); Xq27-qter disomy; deletion 3p26.3 (Ben-Abdallah-Bouhjar et al, 2012); fragile X (Nowicki et al, 2007); and fragile X with 47,XYY (Stalker et al, 2003); deletion in 6q (Izumi et al, 2013); and Klinefelter syndrome karyotype, which showed a duplication of X(q21.1-q21.31) (Pramyothin et al, 2010) (Table 1). Recently, D'Angelo et al (2013) reported different copy number imbalances of chromosomes 2, 3, 6, 10, 12, 14, and X, in nine patients showing the PW-like phenotype.…”