“…The typical phenotype of i(18q) is very comparable to complete trisomy 18 and includes severe growth retardation, occipital prominence, low set ears, downward-slanting palpebral fissures, overlapping flexed fingers, rocker-bottom feet, congenital heart defects, and skeletal abnormalities. The monosomy 18p (18p-) often results in psychomotor retardation, short webbed neck, low posterior hairline, hypospadias, male genital anomalies and holoprosencephaly 67. The present fetus who had 18p11.21→qter duplication and 18p11.21→pter deletion demonstrated typical features of trisomy 18, including ventricular septal defect, limbs malformations and skeletal abnormalities.…”