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1/700. Juvenile nephronophthisis associated with retinal pigmentary dystrophy, cerebellar ataxia, and skeletal abnormalities.

    A boy aged 9 3/4 years with interstitial nephritis, retinal pigmentary dystrophy, cerebellar ataxia, and skeletal abnormalities is described. The association may be due to a new genetic disorder, since 2 similar cases have been reported. ( info)

2/700. Long-term follow-up of skeletal dysplasia in thalassaemia major.

    We report skeletal changes due to deferoxamine (DF) in 15/29 patients with transfusion-dependent thalassaemia major (TM), followed longitudinally for growth assessment. Clinically the earliest signs were decline in height and/or sitting height growth rate, leg and back pain with restricted movement and limb deformity. Radiologically metaphyseal and spinal changes were seen in 5 subjects and vertebral lesions alone in 10. The metaphyseal changes were mild, moderate or severe and affected all long bones, but were most pronounced at wrists and knees. They progressed from widening of the growth plate and defects of metaphyseal margins to appearance of radiolucent pseudocystic areas and, in severe cases, of cupped, rickets-like metaphyses. The spinal changes proceeded from osseous defects of ventral upper and lower edges of vertebrae and biconvex contours of end-plates to platyspondyly with decreased vertebral body height. After DF dose reduction, metaphyseal changes regressed in 2 patients, while they progressed in 3, requiring corrective surgery for severe valgus knee. Spinal abnormalities either remained unchanged or progressed. Final height was very short in patients with spondylometaphyseal lesions, short and disproportionate in patients with only spinal involvement. ( info)

3/700. Mesomelic dysplasia with periosteal thickening, radio-humeral dislocation, osteoporosis and multiple fractures.

    We report a boy with a new form of mesomelic dysplasia characterised by short stature, multifocal periosteal thickening, radio-humeral dislocation, osteoporosis and multiple fractures with minimal trauma. electrophoresis of fibroblast collagens detected defects in type III and type V collagen. CONCLUSION: Bone dysplasias presenting with osteopenia, abnormal trabecular pattern, bone fragility, and periosteal thickening suggest a collagenopathy. A possible collagen defect requires biochemical investigations. ( info)

4/700. Campomelic syndrome and deletion of SOX9.

    The human SOX9 gene, located in chromosome region 17q24.1-25.1, encodes a transcription factor involved in chondrogenesis and testis development. Mutations in this gene cause campomelic syndrome (CMPS) with autosomal sex reversal. Here we describe an infant girl with CMPS and an interstitial deletion on the long arm of chromosome 17 (46,X,del(17)(q23.3q24.3). The extent of SOX9 deletion on one chromosome 17 was defined using unique sequence fluorescent in situ hybridization probes. This is the first report of a patient with CMPS bearing a complete deletion of one SOX9 gene, and as such is the strongest evidence to date for dose-dependent action of the SOX9 protein in normal chondrogenesis. ( info)

5/700. Electrical impedance measurements with the CI24M cochlear implant for a child with Mondini dysplasia.

    Electrical impedance measurements can give useful information about the status of individual electrodes of a cochlear implant. Impedances within the normal range (when measured in the common ground mode of stimulation) suggest that current flow occurs in the tissue and fluid of the cochlea. Low impedance measurements may suggest that particular electrodes are short circuiting, whereas high impedances might be due to a broken electrode wire or an electrode only in contact with air. In the case discussed, low impedance measurements were recorded intra-operatively from a child with Mondini dysplasia on electrodes 1-13 of a Nucleus CI24M device. Post-operatively the impedances had returned to the expected range and were comparable with other patients implanted with the CI24M device. Possible reasons for this are discussed. It was thought that impedances were low intra-operatively due to a larger-than-normal proportion of fluid surrounding the electrode array, rather than short circuits occurring along the array, as suggested by the dps7 software. ( info)

6/700. focal dermal hypoplasia: report of a case with cutaneous and skeletal manifestations.

    focal dermal hypoplasia is a rare genodermatosis characterized by developmental defects of the skin, resulting in widespread linear lesions of dermal hypoplasia with adipose tissue in the dermis. We describe a 13-year-old girl who has typical cutaneous lesions which have been present since birth; she also has some of the associated dental, nail and skeletal abnormalities, while an X-ray of the long bones osteopathia striata is visible, a feature seen in a high proportion of cases of focal dermal hypoplasia. Eighty-eight per cent of the case reports in the literature are of females and X-linked dominance is the likely mode of inheritance. It has also been proposed that the condition is lethal in homozygous males and the high frequency of miscarriages on the maternal side of this patient's family is consistent with that lethality in males. The literature, particularly with regard to pathogenesis and inheritance, is discussed. ( info)

7/700. A mild variant of Desbuquois dysplasia.

    On the basis of three newly observed cases (a pair of siblings and a sporadic case) and one previously reported case, we describe the clinical and radiological phenotype of a skeletal dysplasia resembling Desbuquois dysplasia. The skeletal alterations in the present disorder, including generalized osteopenia, mild modification of the vertebral endplates, epiphyseal flattening of the long bones, broad proximal femora with a spur-like projection of the lesser trochanters (a monkey wrench appearance of the proximal femora), and advanced carpal skeletal age, are almost identical to those of Desbuquois dysplasia. However, postnatal growth failure and minor spondylo-articular problems in the present disorder contrast with the conspicuous prenatal growth failure and severe spondylo-articular deformities of Desbuquois dysplasia. Short stature in the present disorder does not reach the degree of Desbuquois dysplasia. Molecular investigation of one patient excluded abnormalities of the diastrophic dysplasia sulphate transporter gene. CONCLUSION: The combination of skeletal alterations identical to those of Desbuquois dysplasia with milder short stature and spondylo-articular problems in the present patients suggests the nosological proposal of "a mild variant of Desbuquois dysplasia". ( info)

8/700. Fracture reduction and deformity correction with the hexapod Ilizarov fixator.

    A configuration for the Ilizarov external fixator with six distractors and 12 ball joints in the form of a hexapod was developed. The system allows for six degrees of freedom bone fragment displacement by controlling the distractors. Using this assembly, universal three-dimensional corrections or reductions are possible without the need for complicated joint mechanisms. The device was used in 16 patients: five had displaced tibial fractures with severe soft tissue damage, 10 had deformities or pseudarthroses subsequent to treatment of tibial fractures, and one had an axis deviation in the course of tibial lengthening. Translational (to 40 mm) and rotational deformities (to 33 degrees) were corrected. Final radiographic examinations after the correction procedure was complete showed median residual deformities of 3.5 mm (range, 0-5 mm) and 1 degree (range, 0 degree-4 degrees) in the anteroposterior projection and of 1.5 mm (range, 0-6 mm) and less than 1 degree (range, 0 degree-9 degrees) in the lateral projection. The construction is a useful and important addition to the Ilizarov fixator system. As a bone fixation device it is unique in that its optimal use depends on the availability of computer software. ( info)

9/700. Variability in kyphomelic dysplasia.

    Four infants with kyphomelic dysplasia ascertained from three families demonstrate variability within the syndrome. In the first family, sibling recurrence in female sibs was noted with atypical kyphomelic dysplasias, suggesting autosomal recessive inheritance. In the second family, with a male affected with the 'typical findings' of lethal kyphomelic dysplasia, diagnosis of a skeletal dysplasia was suspected at 29-30 weeks' gestation following US detection of short, bent femurs. In the third family, with a female affected, severe radiographic changes were documented at birth. The clinical course of the disease was mild with almost complete regression of the radiographic findings at the age of 7 years. ( info)

10/700. Kyphomelic dysplasia: clinical and radiologic long-term follow-up of one case and review of the literature.

    The authors describe the 17-year follow-up of the (to their knowledge) only adult and only female patient affected with kyphomelic dysplasia so far described in the literature, with assessment of the phenotypic, orthopedic, and radiologic progression of this syndrome. ( info)
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