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A new Turkish infant with clinical features of CS/CISS1 syndrome and homozygous CRLF1 mutation
Affiliation:1. Laboratório Interdiciplinar de Neuroengenharia e Neurociências, Departamento de Engenharia de Biossistemas (DEPEB), Universidade Federal de São João Del-Rei, Pça. Dom Helvécio, 74, 36301-160 São João Del-Rei, MG, Brazil;2. Núcleo de Neurociências, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas (ICB), Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Av. Antônio Carlos 6627, CEP 31270-901 Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil
Abstract:Cold-induced sweating syndrome (CISS) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by profuse sweating at cold environmental temperatures, facial dysmorphism and skeletal features. The infantile presentation of CISS, referred to as Crisponi syndrome (CS), is characterized by facial muscular contractures in response to slight tactile stimuli or during crying, by life-threatening feeding difficulties caused by suck and swallow inabilities, and by intermittent hyperthermia. High febrile crises can lead to death within the first months of life. In preadolescence, surviving patients develop kyphoscoliosis and abnormal sweating.CISS is a genetically heterogeneous disorder caused by mutations in CRLF1 in more than 90 percent of patients (CISS1) and by mutations in CLCF1 in the remaining patients (CISS2). It is now well demonstrated that all patients with an infantile-onset CS will develop CISS, confirming that CS and CISS are not “allelic disorders” but the same clinical entity described at different ages of affected patients.Here we report on a Turkish patient with a phenotype consistent with CS/CISS1 and a nonsense homozygous mutation (c.829C>T, p.R277X) in the CRLF1 gene. This mutation has already been reported in another Turkish patient with CS/CISS1.
Keywords:Crisponi syndrome  Cold-induced sweating syndrome type 1  Muscle contractions  Hyperthermia  Facial dysmorphism  Camptodactyly
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