In this report we review 286 reciprocal translocations (rcpt) diagnosed in Leuven in the period 1966, mid 1991. They were selected from a total number of 82,000 patients karyotyped for constitutional reasons. Special attention is paid to: (1) the phenotypic effect of de novo reciprocal chromosomal rearrangements and (2) the incidence of mental retardation/congenital malformations (MR/CM) in familial rcpt. Important conclusions of this study were: 1) The high incidence of MR/CM in de novo rcpt, not only in patients with complex chromosomal rearrangements (greater than 80%) but also in patients with classical two breaks rcpt (greater than 60%). In contrast, the phenotypic effect of normal/mosaic rcpt seems to be minimal. 2) The overall incidence of MR/CM in carriers of familial balanced rcpt was 6.4%. Interestingly, the incidence of MR/CM problems in rcpt carriers from families detected because of reproductive failure was not increased (2.3%). However, the risk to find MR/CM in a rcpt carrier was much higher (12.8%) if he/she belonged to a family in which the rcpt was detected in an index patient with MR/CM.

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In this report we review 286 reciprocal translocations (rcpt) diagnosed in Leuven in the period 1966, mid 1991. They were selected from a total number of 82,000 patients karyotyped for constitutional reasons. Special attention is paid to: (1) the phenotypic effect of de novo reciprocal chromosomal rearrangements and (2) the incidence of mental retardation/congenital malformations (MR/CM) in familial rcpt.

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