Cases reported "Skin Abnormalities"

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1/15. Knuckle pads, leukonychia, deafness, and keratosis palmoplantaris: report of a family.

    A family is described in which knuckle pads, leukonychia, deafness, and keratosis palmoplantaris are present as a syndrome is several members. This is the second such family reported demonstrating that keratosis palmoplantaris is part of the syndrome. Inheritance pattern is probably autosomal dominant.
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2/15. Cardio-facio-cutaneous syndrome: report of a case with a review of the literature.

    A sporadic case of cardio-facio-cutaneous syndrome occurring in an 18-year-old girl is reported, with a brief review of pertinent literature, for its rarity and clinical interest. She had a characteristic cranio-facial appearance, a wide range of ectodermal defects, dystrophic nails and teeth, palmo-plantar keratoderma, typical short, coarse, unruly hair, pulmonic stenosis and mild mental retardation. She had no history of consanguinity and genetic studies did not reveal any abnormality.
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3/15. Myocardial storage of chondroitin sulfate-containing moieties in costello syndrome patients with severe hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.

    costello syndrome is a distinctive multiple congenital anomaly syndrome, characterized by loose soft skin with deep palmar and plantar creases, loose joints, distinctive coarse facial features, skeletal abnormalities, cardiac abnormalities (cardiovascular malformation (CVM), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, tachycardia), predisposition to malignancy, developmental delays, and mental retardation. Previous studies with cultured fibroblasts from individuals with costello syndrome demonstrate excessive accumulation of chondroitin sulfate-bearing proteoglycans, associated with both impaired formation of elastic fibers and an unusually high rate of cellular proliferation. Despite multiple clinical reports of cardiac abnormalities, there has been only one previously published report describing post-mortem findings in hearts from costello syndrome patients. Here we provide a detailed description of the post-mortem findings of the hearts of three children with costello syndrome. Routine histological examination and results of targeted histochemical and immunohistochemical studies revealed that in addition to cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, these hearts also demonstrated massive pericellular and intracellular accumulation of chondroitin sulfate-bearing proteoglycans and a marked reduction of elastic fibers. Normal stroma was replaced by multifocal collagenous fibrosis. Most peculiar was the finding that the bulk of the chondroitin sulfate accumulated in these costello syndrome hearts is a chondroitin-6-sulfate. In contrast, deposition of chondroitin-4 sulfate was below the level detected in normal hearts. We propose that an imbalance in sulfation of chondroitin sulfate molecules and subsequent accumulation of chondroitin-6-sulfate in cardiomyocytes contribute to the development of the hypertrophic cardiomyopathy of costello syndrome.
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4/15. costello syndrome showing moyamoya-like vasculopathy.

    This report describes a patient with costello syndrome associated with moyamoya-like vasculopathy. His clinical findings were sparse, thin, and light-colored hair, bilateral ptosis, low-set ears, depressed nasal bridge, bulbous nose, short neck, loose pigmented skin with deep palmar and plantar creases, bilateral cryptorchidism, and delays in growth and development. brain magnetic resonance imaging and cerebral angiography revealed moyamoya-like vasculopathy. A skin biopsy from the extensor surface of the right thigh revealed shortening and rupture of elastic fibers. Electron microscopy indicated reduced depositions of elastin. Formation of a stable elastic fiber system may be impaired in patients with costello syndrome, and brain magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance angiography would be recommended for these patients.
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5/15. Cardiofaciocutaneous syndrome (CFC) with congenital peripheral neuropathy and nonorganic malnutrition: an autopsy study.

    Many phenotypic manifestations have been reported in cardiofaciocutaneous (CFC) syndrome, but none, to date, are pathognomonic or obligatory. Previous histopathological studies reported findings in skin and hair; no autopsy studies have been published. We report the clinical and autopsy findings of a 7-year-old boy with severe CFC syndrome and malnutrition of psychosocial origin. Manifestations of CFC, reported previously, included macrocephaly and macrosomia at birth; short stature; hypotonia; global developmental delays; dry, sparse thin curly hair; sparse eyebrows and eyelashes; dilated cerebral ventricles; high cranial vault; bitemporal constriction; supraorbital ridge hypoplasia; hypertelorism; ptosis; exophthalmos; depressed nasal bridge; anteverted nostrils; low-set, posteriorly-rotated, large, thick ears; decayed, dysplastic teeth; strabismus; hyperelastic skin; wrinkled palms; keratosis pilaris atrophicans faciei; ulerythema ophryogenes; hyperkeratosis; gastroesophageal reflux; and tracheobronchomalacia. Additional findings, not previously reported, include islet cell hyperplasia, lymphoid depletion, thymic atrophy and congenital hypertrophy of peripheral nerves with onion bulb formations. Although the islet cell hyperplasia, lymphoid depletion, and thymic atrophy are nonspecific findings that may be associated with either CFC or malnutrition, the onion bulb hypertrophy is specific for a demyelinating-remyelinating neuropathy. These findings implicate congenital peripheral neuropathy in the pathogenesis of the developmental delays, feeding difficulties, respiratory difficulties, ptosis and short stature in this case. Additional studies of other cases of CFC are needed.
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6/15. Delineation of the costello syndrome.

    We present a 15-year-old girl with mental retardation, short stature, coarse face, unusually thick, loose skin of the hands and feet, deep plantar and palmar creases, and nasal papillomata. Her history and physical findings are compared to those of 2 children initially reported by Costello and to 1 child recently reported by Der Kaloustian et al.
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7/15. proteus syndrome.

    The term proteus syndrome was coined in 1983 to describe a disorder of skeletal, hamartomatous, and other mesodermal malformations. The syndrome was named after the Greek god Proteus, whose name means "the Polymorphous." Clinical features of this new syndrome are currently being defined. Including the case reported herein, we have found 34 patients with proteus syndrome described in the English literature. Major clinical findings, defined as those findings seen in more than half of the cases, include hemihypertrophy, macrodactyly, exostoses, epidermal nevi, characteristic cerebriform masses involving the plantar or palmar surfaces, a variety of subcutaneous masses, and scoliosis. Histologic examination of subcutaneous masses has identified a variety of lipomatous, hamartomatous, and angiomatous tumors.
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8/15. Hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia: a genealogic, stereomicroscope, and scanning electron microscope study.

    This is a report of three patients with hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia, or Christ-Siemens-Touraine syndrome, their genealogic backgrounds and the stereomicroscope and scanning electron microscopic appearances of the hair, the skin of their fingertips and palms as well as skin studies of members of their families. The skin morphology was recorded by means of silicone monomer rubber impressions and epoxy resin dyes. In two of the patients the disease was acquired by X-linked inheritance, while in the third, a boy, it appeared to follow an autosomal dominant pattern. Defects of the skin of the fingertips and palms of the propositi and members of the families included abnormalities of the morphology and pattern of the epidermal ridges, reduction of sweat pores varying from 13 to 87% of normal, and changed anatomy of the openings of the sweat glands. The openings were shallow and with less whorling compared to the normal, funnel-shaped sweat pores. Among the sweat pores, micropores, or openings with an average diameter of 5.3 micrometers, were observed. One of the propositi and the affected father of another had orifices on their fingertips resembling hair sheaths. Two propositi and the affected father of one exhibited grooving of the hair. The findings confirm the necessity for genealogic investigations in patients with or suspected of having the disease in order to advise parents or prospective parents. They also illustrate the usefulness of stereomicroscopy and scanning electron microscopy in observing skin and hair abnormalities.
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9/15. Wrinkly skin syndrome: phenotype and additional manifestations.

    The wrinkly skin syndrome is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by wrinkling of the skin of the dorsum of the hands and feet, decreased elastic recoil of the skin, an increased number of palmar and plantar creases, multiple musculoskeletal abnormalities, microcephaly, and mental retardation. Our patient is characteristic of the syndrome as previously described, and confirms the presence of mental retardation and microcephaly as component manifestations, with the additional findings of connective tissue abnormalities evidenced by an atrial septal aneurysm.
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10/15. Richner-Hanhart's syndrome: ultrastructural abnormalities of epidermal keratinization indicating a causal relationship to high intracellular tyrosine levels.

    Richner-Hanhart's syndrome (corneal dystrophies, palmoplantar keratoses, and mental retardation) is caused by high levels of L-tyrosine in the blood, probably due to a defect of soluble tyrosine aminotransferase. Biopsies of skin lesions of 3 cases revealed peculiar ultrastructural changes that were not found in controls and have not been recorded before. Thickening of the granular layer and increased synthesis of tonofibrils and keratohyalin occurred in all cases. In the ridged palmar or plantar skin large numbers of microtubules and unusually tight packing of tonofibrillar masses were regularly demonstrable, the latter containing tubular channels or inclusions of microtubules. It is assumed that increased cohesion and tight packing of tonofilaments could prevent normal spreading of keratohyalin and result in its globular appearance. No crystal formation was observed in epidermal keratinocytes nor was there lysosomal damage. A biochemical model to correlate these ultrastructural findings to known biochemical and clinical features is proposed. It is suggested that excessive amounts of intracellular tyrosine enhance cross-links between aggregated tonofilaments and modulate the number and stability of microtubules.
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