Cases reported "Diseases in Twins"

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1/84. Wolf's syndrome in twins -- translocation in the mother.

    A case of MZ twins, both affected by Wolf's syndrome, is described. Their mother, of subnormal look and low intellectual level is translocated. The children, born with a weight and size much below the average, show a very special morphotype; a hook-nose, an an abnormal conformation of the back edge of the nostrils (a protrusion in the shape of a horn overhanging the filtrum), hypertelorism, microcephaly. Great asynchronism in the maturation of the bones and a somatoschisis of the body of the cervical vertebrae are noted. Deletion of the short arm chromosome 4 is juxtacentromeric. The study of blood and tissue groups corroborates monozygosity. Dermatoglyphs are little abnormal and identical in the two children. The mother's family is phenotypically normal. At 19 months of age, measuring is still below 4, psychomotor progress is extremely weak, and convulsions are frequent.
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2/84. Protracted and variable latency of acute lymphoblastic leukemia after TEL-AML1 gene fusion in utero.

    We report a pair of identical twins with concordant acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Unusually, their diagnoses were spaced 9 years apart at ages 5 and 14. Leukemic cells in both twins had a TEL-AML1 rearrangement, which was characterized at the dna level by an adaptation of a long distance polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method. The genomic fusion sequence was identical in the two leukemias, indicative of a single cell origin in one fetus, in utero. At the time twin 1 was diagnosed (aged 5 years), the bone marrow of twin 2 was hematologically normal. However, retrospective scrutiny of the dna from an archived slide with clonotypic TEL-AML1 primers showed that the presumptive preleukemic clone was present and disseminated 9 years before a clinical diagnosis. These data provide novel insight into the natural history of childhood leukemia and suggest that consequent to a prenatal initiation of a leukemic clone, most probably by TEL-AML fusion itself, the latency of ALL can be both extremely variable and protracted. This, in turn, is likely to reflect the timing of critical secondary events.
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3/84. Dizygotic twin sisters with myelokathexis: mechanism of its neutropenia.

    Dizygotic twin sisters were first found to have neutropenia at 1 year of age when evaluated for recurrent pulmonary infections. Since then they have remained neutropenic (0.05 approximately 0.5 x 10(9)/l). Despite of their neutropenia, myeloid hyperplasia was evident on a marrow smear examination, and a number of cells were hypersegmented with fine interlobular bridging with chromatin strands and cytoplasmic vacuolation. Electron microscopy showed apoptotic cells with condensed nuclei and apoptotic bodies in the cytoplasm. Although life span, hydrogen peroxide production, phagocytosis, spreading, and chemotaxis of peripheral neutrophils were normal, the survival of bone marrow neutrophils in both infants was markedly decreased when compared with that of normal bone marrow neutrophils. During the bone marrow culture apoptotic neutrophils were observed at an earlier stage in both patients than in normal controls, biochemically and morphologically. Morphology of bone marrow neutrophils in both patients resembled that of cultured control bone marrow neutrophils. Peripheral neutropenia and appearance of characteristic neutrophils in the bone marrow in myelokathexis are considered to be an expression of apoptosis of bone marrow neutrophils.
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4/84. anatomy of a duplicated human foot from a limb with fibular dimelia.

    At birth, a patient presented with a right lower limb featuring preaxial polydactyly and fibular dimelia with a complete absence of the tibia. Radiographic studies of the patient's foot revealed a duplicated tarsus with eight metatarsals and toes. The three preaxial toes were surgically removed at 1 year of age. A hallux and four normal-appearing postaxial toes remained. The foot was amputated when the patient was 3 years old. dissection of the amputated foot revealed that the muscles of the dorsum were normal, except that the tendon of the extensor hallucis brevis muscle inserted into both the hallux and toe 2, rather than only into the hallux. The few abnormalities observed among the muscles on the plantar surface of the foot included absence of the insertions of the tibialis posterior and the abductor hallucis muscles. In addition, the two heads of the adductor hallucis muscle inserted abnormally into the medial (tibial) side of metatarsal 1, rather than into the lateral side. These various muscular anomalies, in addition to the mirror duplication of the foot with the presence of only a single metatarsal 1, leads us to propose that this metatarsal probably represents two lateral (fibular) halves that form a laterally duplicated bone. Although the dorsalis pedis artery was present on the dorsal surface of the foot, most of its derivatives were absent. This artery did give rise to a supernumerary medial branch that ended abruptly in the connective tissue (presumably postsurgical scar) at the medial border of the foot. This branch may have represented a duplicated dorsalis pedis artery associated with the duplicated preaxial portion of the foot. The arteries on the plantar surface of the foot were normal. Even though some anomalies in the pattern of the cutaneous innervation were observed, the nerves of the foot were largely normal. The gross and radiographic anatomy of this specimen and the radiographic anatomy of the leg suggest that some teratogenic event occurred when developmental specification reached the level of the future knee. The teratogenic event, which probably occurred early in the fifth week of development, may have caused damage that led to a lateral duplication of both the leg and the foot with the absence of some of the most medial structures. teratology 60:272-282, 1999.
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5/84. Retroperitonial, teratoma as fetus in fetu--a case report.

    We report a rare case of Retroperitonial teratoma containing Axial skeleton long bone. jaw, pelvis & scapula in a 27 yrs old male. Aberration in monozygotic twinning may rarely present as fetus in Fetu. Rarer is presentation in adult.
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6/84. Paget's disease in identical twins.

    Paget's disease of bone was found in each of elderly monozygotic twin sisters. Apart from the skull, which was affected in each twin, different bones were involved by Paget's disease. This is the fifth pair of identical twins reported with Paget's disease of bone.
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7/84. Spontaneous remission of congenital acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia with normal karyotype in twins.

    BACKGROUND: Congenital acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia (cANLL) is an extremely rare event and represents only 0.5-1% of the leukemias in the first year of life. It is usually more common among patients with chromosomal abnormalities. Transient myeloproliferative disease (TMD) is an hyperleukocytosis entity that occurs almost exclusively in down syndrome patients and remits spontaneously. Spontaneous remission of congenital leukemia has been reported and related to the presence of an extra chromosome 21. PROCEDURE: A pair of non-down syndrome newborn twins presented with a clinical picture of skin rash and hyperleukocytosis. Twin B had full-blown cANLL with bone marrow, peripheral blood, skin, CSF, and placental invasion. Twin A presented transient peripheral blood and skin involvement by the same type of blast cells. No cytotoxic therapy was given. With 2 years follow-up, they continue to do well. RESULTS: Histologic and immunophenotypical analysis of placentas, cord blood, skin, CSF, bone marrows, and peripheral blood revealed a consistent picture of intrautero cANLL in twin B, with transplacental invasion of twin A. Normal and blast cells were found to be karyotypically normal. Spontaneous remission occurred. CONCLUSIONS: cANLL with karyotypically normal blasts can develop a self-limited clinical course, which has resemblances to TMD.
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8/84. Concordant childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia in monozygotic twins.

    Two 4-year-old monozygotic Chinese, female twins developed concordant childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) within an interval of about 2 weeks. Based on morphology and cytochemistry findings of the bone marrow blast cells, a diagnosis of ALL, L1 was made. immunophenotyping showed the blast cells of both twins expressed similar antigens, i.e. HLA-DR, CD10, CD13, CD19, CD22 and CD34. Identical blood group, same HLA (human leucocyte antigen) genotype, sex and similar appearance suggest that the twins are monozygotic. Since the bone marrow leukemic cells of both twins were identical in morphology and expressed the same antigens with almost similar percentages of positivity, it is likely that the blast cells were derived from the same single clone. Based on the single clone hypothesis, the leukemogenic event must have arisen in utero in one twin and the cells from the abnormal clone then spread to the other twin via shared placental anastomoses.
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9/84. Immunologic chimerism as evidence of bone marrow graft acceptance in an identical twin with acute lymphocytic leukemia.

    bone marrow from a well child was infused into her identical twin who had acute lymphocytic leukemia. In an attempt to provide an immunologic tag for use in twin transplantation, the donor twin was immunized to Keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) and yellow fever virus prior to the marrow infusion. Subsequent immunological chimerism in the recipient twin gave evidence for graft acceptance.
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10/84. Parietal pseudofracture and spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage suggesting nonaccidental trauma: report of 2 cases.

    Massive intracranial hemorrhage, no history of trauma and radiographic findings that were initially interpreted as linear parietal fractures raised the possibility of nonaccidental trauma in 2 infants. Both had severe coagulopathy, 1 due to hemorrhagic disease of the newborn (vitamin k deficiency) and the other due to disseminated herpes simplex virus infection. Both infants died. At autopsy, the parietal bone abnormalities were not fractures, but proved to be an anomalous suture in 1 and a connective tissue fissure in the other.
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