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Toriello-Carey syndrome: Evidence for X-linked inheritance
Authors:Paula Czarnecki  Didier Lacombe  Lester Weiss
Institution:Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan
Abstract:Toriello-Carey syndrome is characterized by agenesis of the corpus callosum, telecanthus, short palpebral fissures, Robin sequence, abnormal ears, cardiac anomalies, and hypotonia. We describe two patients with Toriello-Carey syndrome and call attention to an unbalanced sex ratio. The first patient, a male, was born at term by Cesarean section and manifests micrognathia, cleft soft palate, hypoplastic right ear, anotia on the left side, cerebellar vermis hypoplasia, hydrocephalus, agenesis of the corpus callosum, and hypoplastic left heart. He died 2 days after birth. The second patient is the male sib of a patient reported previously Am J Med Genet 42: 374–376; 1992]. He had large fontanelles, telecanthus, a short nose, small and malformed ears, micrognathia, a large ventricular septal defect, and pulmonary stenosis. At age 8 months he has growth retardation and developmental delay. A sister is unaffected. Review documented eight other patients with Toriello-Carey syndrome, six of whom were male. The two female patients are less severely affected and are still alive. Of the other male patients, all are deceased except one who is still alive at age 5 years; he has severe growth retardation (-3 SD), mental retardation (DQ44), severe speech delay, and characteristic anomalies. The predominance of affected males and the milder phenotype in the female patients suggests an X-linked gene or sex influenced gene. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Keywords:agenesis of the corpus callosum  Robin sequence  cardiac defect  malformed ears  X-linked  developmental delay
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