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Bruck syndrome: neonatal presentation and natural course in three patients
Authors:J. G. Leroy  Lieve Nuytinck  Anne De Paepe  Magda De Rammelaere  Yves Gillerot  Alain Verloes  Bart Loeys  William De Groote
Affiliation:(1) Department of Pediatrics Ghent University School of Medicine 185, De Pintelaan, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium, BE;(2) Department of Medical Genetics Ghent University School of Medicine Ghent, Belgium, BE;(3) Medisch-pedagogisch Instituut “D. Savio” Gits, W. VI., Belgium, BE;(4) Institut de Pathologie et de Genetique Loverval, Belgium, BE;(5) Division of Clinical Genetics University Hospital University of Liege Liege, Belgium, BE;(6) Division of Orthopedic Surgery General Hospital St. Jan Brugge, Belgium, BE
Abstract:Three unrelated patients with congenital arthrogryposis and brittle bones, the main neonatal signs of Bruck syndrome, are presented. In infancy and early childhood recurrent fractures of ribs and long bones and persistent Wormian bones in the calvarium are reminiscent of osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) even with white sclerae, normal dental quality and normal hearing as important clinical negatives. The diagnosis was made before two years of age in two, and in adolescence in the third patient. The latter's radiologically documented long-term natural course reveals slow progressivity of osteopenia and growth deficiency, worsening tendon contractures and pterygia in addition to increasing spine and pelvis deformation. Mental development remains normal. Bruck syndrome is monogenic and probably due to homozygosity of an as yet unidentified gene. As no alteration in the collagens I and III is detected and molecular screening reveals no mutation in the COL1A1 and COL1A2 genes, the pathogenesis of this severe disorder of connective tissue remains largely unknown. Received/accepted: 6 May 1998
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