Partial trisomy for the distal long arm of chromosome 5 (region q34→qter). A new clinically recognizable syndrome |
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Authors: | Cynthia J. R. Curry William D. Loughman Uta Francke Bryan D. Hall Mitchell S. Golbus Judy Dersttne Charles J. Epstein |
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Affiliation: | Departments of Pediatrics and Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of California, San Francisco;Department of Pediatrics, University of California, San Diego, U. S. A |
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Abstract: | This report describes a family in which eight individuals in three generations had mental retardation in association with a characteristic pattern of clinical problems and physical abnormalities including short stature, eczema, hernias, delayed puberty, dysmorphic facies and digital anomalies. The family history was consistent with a chromosomal rearrangement with transmission through balanced carriers. Routine ASG banding studies showed extra chromosomal material on a chromosome 16 but failed to demonstrate any differences between the affected individuals and the presumed carriers. However, subsequent studies utilizing trypsin banding and microspectrophotometry of individual chromosomes demonstrated that the affected individuals were partially trisomic for the distal band of the long arm of chromosome 5 and that 0.273 units of a chromosome 5 were translocated to chromosome 16. This definitive cytogenetic diagnosis permitted accurate prenatal diagnosis to be carried out on the fetus of a balanced carrier female. The application of these techniques to previously obscure familial dysmorphic syndromes is recommended. |
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Keywords: | Congenital malformations cytogenetics GTG staining prenatal diagnosis quantitative densitometry translocation trisomy 5q |
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