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We diagnosed Pallister-Mosaic syndrome (PMS) in a 4-month-old female infant. In addition to the presence of non-specific anomalies, involving anorectal, finger and ear anomalies, characteristic cranio-facial features and irregular skin lesions that appeared after age 2 months suggested the possibility of genetic mosaicism, PMS in particular. Fluorescence in situ hybridization technique revealed an extra copy of chromosome 12p; i (12p) in 30% of cultured skin fibroblasts. When focal skin lesions accompany neurodevelopmental disabilities in early infancy, genetic analysis for mosaicism should be considered for differential diagnosis. Significantly, we describe several phenotypic features and neuroimaging findings of the PMS in the present case, which have not been described in previous reports. The neuroimaging abnormalities we encountered, such as polymicrogyria, speculating congenital brain anomaly, may explain the severe motor and intellectual disabilities of PMS.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0387-7604(03)00024-x | DOI Listing |
J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus
March 2006
Department of Ophthalmology Medical Research Foundation, Chennai, India.
Pallister mosaic syndrome, a genetic disorder, has various systemic and ocular manifestations. We report the first association of high myopia with Pallister mosaic syndrome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Dev
August 2003
Department of Pediatric Neurology, Kobe Medical Center for the Persons with Severe Motor and Intellectual Disabilities (SMID), 14-1, Nakaichiriyama, Shimo-tanigami, Yamada-cho, Kita-ku, Kobe, Hyogo 651-1102, Japan.
We diagnosed Pallister-Mosaic syndrome (PMS) in a 4-month-old female infant. In addition to the presence of non-specific anomalies, involving anorectal, finger and ear anomalies, characteristic cranio-facial features and irregular skin lesions that appeared after age 2 months suggested the possibility of genetic mosaicism, PMS in particular. Fluorescence in situ hybridization technique revealed an extra copy of chromosome 12p; i (12p) in 30% of cultured skin fibroblasts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Med Genet
December 1988
Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver 80262.
A patient who exhibited the phenotype of the Pallister mosaic aneuploid syndrome was cytogenetically diagnosed in the newborn period by bone marrow analysis. A 47,XY,i(12p) karyotype was observed in 100% of the metaphases from direct bone marrow preparations, while phytohemagglutinin (PHA)-stimulated bone marrow was 23% isochromosome positive. Initially, 10% of metaphases from a peripheral blood culture were isochromosome positive, but at 2 months of age all metaphases examined were cytogenetically normal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFour new cases are reported in which mosaicism for a supernumerary chromosome interpreted as an isochromosome for 12p [i(12p)] is present. In 2 cases seen in early childhood the mosaicism was present at a low level in peripheral blood and was documented in one case to be present with a higher frequency in fibroblast cultures from skin. These cases have clinical features compatible with those in previously reported cases of the Teschler-Nicola/Killian syndrome, many of whom have now been found to be mosaic for a similar i(12p) chromosome in fibroblast cultures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on 11 cases of isochromosome 12p mosaicism (or Pallister mosaic aneuploidy syndrome) in which the isochromosome is usually absent in cultured lymphocytes but present in fibroblasts. The patients range in age from a 22-week-gestation fetus to a 45-year-old man. They have a distinct pattern of anomalies which enables one to make a diagnosis based on clinical manifestations alone.
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