Cases reported "Microphthalmos"

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1/30. microcephaly, colobomatous microphthalmia, short stature, and severe psychomotor retardation in two male cousins: a new MCA/MR syndrome?

    We report on 2 male cousins with minor facial anomalies, microcephaly, colobomatous microphthalmia, psychomotor retardation, short stature, and skeletal malformations. The children belong to a highly inbred family. We conclude that these patients have a previously undescribed autosomal-recessive syndrome.
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ranking = 1
keywords = microcephaly
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2/30. syndrome of microcephaly, microphthalmia, cataracts, and intracranial calcification.

    We present two sisters with microcephaly, developmental delay, marked microphthalmia, congenital cataracts, cerebral and cerebellar hypoplasia, and intracranial calcification. No evidence of intrauterine infection was found. There have been previous reports of microcephaly, intracranial calcification, and an intrauterine infection-like autosomal recessive condition, but the sibs in this report appear to represent a more severe form of such a condition or a previously undescribed entity.
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ranking = 6
keywords = microcephaly
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3/30. Colobomatous microphthalmia, microcephaly with cerebellar hypoplasia: association or new syndrome?

    We report on a 3.5-year-old girl with microcephaly, microphthalmia, coloboma of the iris, mild developmental delay, and other minor anomalies. neuroimaging showed marked cerebellar and vermian hypoplasia. This condition has not been described previously and is discussed in the context of the "micro syndrome," together with other similar syndromes. Our case highlights the heterogeneity of the "microphthalmia plus brain malformations" group of patients.
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ranking = 5
keywords = microcephaly
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4/30. microcephaly, microphthalmia, congenital cataract, with calcification of the basal ganglia: MCA/MR syndrome.

    We present a Hungarian girl with microcephaly, microphthalmia, congenital cataract, prominent nasal root, peaked nose, micrognathia with high arched palate, mild mental retardation, calcification of the basal ganglia and serology for the connatal infections. We suggest that our proband may be an allelic variant of COFS syndrome.
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ranking = 1
keywords = microcephaly
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5/30. Micro syndrome in Muslim pakistan children.

    OBJECTIVE: To date, Micro syndrome has been reported in only three children from one family. We describe an additional 14 children from 11 families. DESIGN: Retrospective case series. PARTICIPANTS: Fourteen children from 11 families attending one of five British hospitals. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The following features were documented: pre- and postoperative eye findings, electrophysiologic analysis, systemic abnormalities, development, neuroimaging, genealogy, geographic origin of family. RESULTS: We expand and modify the description of ocular and electrophysiologic findings in Micro syndrome. The eye findings of microphakia, microphthalmos, characteristic lens opacity, and atonic pupils were the presenting feature in all infants and were the most reliable diagnostic signs in the immediate postnatal period. Cortical visual impairment, microcephaly, and developmental delay were not always detectable initially; they developed in all children by 6 months of age. Microgenitalia were a useful diagnostic clue in affected males only. Therefore, eye features were more consistently useful in determining diagnosis than dysmorphology or brain imaging. The families of all the children originate from the Muslim population of Northern pakistan. Inheritance is likely to be autosomal recessive. CONCLUSIONS: Micro syndrome usually presents to the ophthalmologist, who may be able to make the diagnosis on the basis of characteristic eye findings combined with ethnic origin. Initially, the nature and severity of nonophthalmic features are not apparent. early diagnosis of the underlying condition is important to guide management of the cataracts, glaucoma, and developmental delay. It is helpful for the family and medical staff to be aware of the low level of vision that develops despite optimal ophthalmic intervention. genetic counseling extending into the wider family is particularly important in view of the high rate of consanguinity.
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ranking = 1
keywords = microcephaly
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6/30. Abnormal development of the lesser wing of the sphenoid with microphthalmos and microcephaly.

    We report two patients with abnormal development of the lesser wing of the sphenoid bone, globe, optic nerve and cerebral hemisphere without stigmata of neurofibromatosis type 1. The lesser wing of the sphenoid bone was abnormally formed and was not ossified ipsilateral to the dysmorphic eye and underdeveloped cerebral hemisphere. Maldevelopment of the sphenoid wing may interfere with the normal closure of the optic vesicle and normal growth of encephalic structures, possibly by disturbing developmental tissue interactions. These patients may exhibit a type of restricted primary sphenoid dysplasia, while the sphenoid dysplasia of neurofibromatosis type 1 may be secondary to orbital or ocular neurofibromas and other factors associated with that disease.
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ranking = 4
keywords = microcephaly
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7/30. Microphthalmia, facial anomalies, microcephaly, thumb and hallux hypoplasia, and agammaglobulinemia.

    We report a boy, born to consanguineous patients, with agammaglobulinemia associated with multiple physical anomalies: mild intrauterine growth retardation, extreme microphthalmia (clinical anophthalmia), severe microcephaly, blepharophimosis, long face with temporal narrowing, scaphocephalic skull shape, posterior cleft palate, hypoplastic, adducted thumbs with small nails, and short, inward turned halluces with absent distal phalanges and nails. Psychomotor development was moderately delayed. No mutations were found in exons of BKT and PAX-5 genes. This unreported constellation could represent a novel, autosomal recessive syndrome.
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ranking = 5
keywords = microcephaly
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8/30. Manifestations in four males with and an obligate carrier of the Lenz microphthalmia syndrome.

    Lenz microphthalmia syndrome is a rare X-linked recessive condition first described by Lenz in 1955 and comprises of anophthalmia, microcephaly, mental retardation, external ear, digital, cardiac, skeletal, and urogenital anomalies. We present three brothers (ages 15 years, 9 years, and 18 months) and a maternal uncle (age 27 years) with congenital anophthalmia, delayed motor development, hypotonia, and moderate to severe mental retardation. They also have abnormally modeled ears, high-arched palate, pectus excavatum, finger and toe syndactyly, clinodactyly, fetal pads, scoliosis, cardiac, and renal abnormalities. An obligate carrier had abnormally modeled ears and syndactyly of the 2nd to 3rd toes bilaterally. Linkage and haplotype analysis in this family indicates that the gene is located in a 17.65-cM region on chromosome region Xq27-Xq28.
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ranking = 1
keywords = microcephaly
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9/30. A new case of Balci's syndrome (corneal opacity, microphthalmia, microcephaly, mental retardation, and generalized muscular spasticity associated with congenital heart disease).

    The association of corneal opacity, microphthalmia, microcephaly, mental retardation, and generalized muscular spasticity with hyperglycinemia was presented for the first time by Balci and colleagues in 1974. After this report, some similar cases in the literature were referred to as Balci's syndrome. In this paper we describe a new case of Balci's syndrome, a 2.5-month-old female patient with corneal opacity, microphthalmia, microcephaly, mental retardation, and generalized muscular spacticity. All of these findings are acceptable as Balci's syndrome, and in addition she had congenital heart disease (ventricular septal defect) and renal anomalies. In this paper other syndromes associated with corneal opacity and mental retardation are discussed.
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ranking = 6
keywords = microcephaly
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10/30. autopsy case of multiple anomalies with hypoplastic cerebrum, eyes, and endocrine organs, mimicking Micro syndrome.

    We report an autopsy case of multiple anomalies with severe micrencephaly, bilateral microphthalmos, and hypoplastic endocrine organs. We examined expressions of calcium-binding proteins and hypothalamic and pituitary hormones. A female proband presented with microcephaly, microphthalmia, and psychomotor development delay. At the age of 23 years, she died of cardiorespiratory failure. The endocrine organs demonstrated severe underdevelopment, and the hypoplastic eyeballs had remnant lens, vitreous hemorrhage, and retinal detachment. The brain weighed 260 g; the cerebrum, cerebellum, and brain stem were extremely small; and the tertiary sulci were absent in the cerebral surface. The cross-sectional area of cerebral cortex was reduced to about one third of those in the control, although six-layered lamination, density of pyramidal neurons, and expressions of calcium-binding proteins were comparatively preserved in the cerebral cortex. The third ventricle was hypoplastic, and the bilateral thalami appeared to be fused and the hippocampus was unrolled, whereas the corpus callosum was preserved. In the hypothalamus, the paraventricular nucleus was only identified, and the adenohypophysial somatotrophs were reduced. This may be the first autopsy report of Micro syndrome, which is characterized by microcephaly, brain malformations, optic atrophy, and hypogenitalism, although the case lacked agenesis of the corpus callosum.
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ranking = 2
keywords = microcephaly
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