| Literature DB >> 1384156 |
S Schwartz1, L J Raffel, C C Sun, E Waters.
Abstract
A 40-year-old white woman underwent amniocentesis for advanced maternal age at 15.4 weeks gestation. Fetal chromosome analysis demonstrated two distinct cell lines: [46,XX,t(1;19)(p11;p11)]--10%; and [47,XX,t(1;19)(p11;p11) + der(1)t(1;19)(p11;q11)]--90%. The latter karyotype was trisomic for both 1q and 19p. The mother carried the balanced translocation; the father had a normal karyotype. Amniotic fluid alpha-fetoprotein level was elevated and an acetylcholinesterase band was detected. Level II ultrasonography at 17 and 24 weeks revealed several abnormalities, including a large facial cleft and a probable facial teratoma and intracranial tumor. Autopsy following pregnancy termination confirmed the presence of both. Chromosome evaluation of 172 metaphases of both the epignathus and the intracranial teratoma demonstrated a predominance of the cell line with 47 chromosomes (166/172 = 96.5%), while from nonteratoma tissue (lung, liver, skin, and brain) only the balanced karyotype was detected. These observations suggest that the chromosomal imbalance is instrumental in the etiology of the teratoma.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1992 PMID: 1384156 DOI: 10.1002/tera.1420460410
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Teratology ISSN: 0040-3709