| Literature DB >> 27683483 |
Romina Romaniello1, Susan Marelli1, Roberto Giorda2, Maria F Bedeschi3, Maria C Bonaglia4, Filippo Arrigoni5, Fabio Triulzi5, Maria T Bassi2, Renato Borgatti1.
Abstract
To gain a better understanding of the clinical and genetic features associated with agenesis of corpus callosum, we enrolled and characterized 162 patients with complete or partial agenesis of corpus callosum. Clinical and genetic protocols allowed us to categorize patients as syndromic subjects, affected by complex extra-brain malformations, and nonsyndromic subjects without any additional anomalies. We observed slight differences in sex ratio (56% males) and agenesis type (52% complete). Syndromic agenesis of corpus callosum subjects were prevalent (69%). We detected associated cerebral malformations in 48% of patients. Neuromotor impairment, cognitive and language disorders, and epilepsy were frequently present, regardless of the agenesis of corpus callosum subtype. Long-term follow-up allowed us to define additional indicators: syndromic agenesis of corpus callosum plus patients showed the most severe clinical features while isolated complete agenesis of corpus callosum patients had the mildest symptoms, although we observed intellectual disability (64%) and epilepsy (15%) in both categories. We achieved a definitive (clinical and/or genetic) diagnosis in 42% of subjects.Entities:
Keywords: array-CGH; brain malformations; corpus callosum; genetic; intellectual disability
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27683483 DOI: 10.1177/0883073816664668
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Neurol ISSN: 0883-0738 Impact factor: 1.987