| Literature DB >> 28102591 |
Naoko Toda1, Kenji Ihara1,2, Kanako Kojima-Ishii1, Masayuki Ochiai1, Kazuhiro Ohkubo1, Yutaka Kawamoto3, Yoshinori Kohno4, Sakae Kumasaka5, Akihiko Kawase6, Yasuhisa Ueno7, Takeshi Futatani8, Tokuo Miyazawa9, Yuko Nagaoki10, Setsuko Nakata11, Maiko Misaki12, Hiroko Arai13, Masahiko Kawai14, Maki Sato15, Yukari Yada16, Nobuhiro Takahashi17, Atsushi Komatsu18, Kanemasa Maki19, Shinichi Watabe20, Yutaka Sumida21, Makoto Kuwashima22, Hiroshi Mizumoto23, Kazuo Sato24, Toshiro Hara1.
Abstract
Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) is a congenital overgrowth syndrome that is occasionally associated with hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia (HH) in the neonatal period. Sotos syndrome (SS) and Kabuki syndrome (KS) are other malformation syndromes that may be complicated with HH, however, the detailed clinical characteristics of HH accompanied with these syndromes remain unclear. We herein conducted a nationwide questionnaire survey in Japan. We sent a primary questionnaire concerning the clinical experience for these syndromes to 347 perinatal care institutions. As a result, 222 departments or hospitals returned the questionnaires and the total numbers of BWS, SS, and KS patients were 113, 88, and 51, respectively. We sent a secondary questionnaire to 31 institutions where patients with these syndromes presented with HH during infancy. The secondary questionnaires were returned from the institutions and the numbers of patients were 16 for BWS, 9 for SS, and 3 for KS, respectively. Then, we compared the clinical characteristics of infants suffering from transient HH with and without these dysmorphic syndromes. As a result, BWS, SS, and KS patients showed significantly larger body size, lower Apgar scores, higher insulin levels at HH, and shorter durations of HH than non-dysmorphic infants with transient HH. We propose that a careful observation for the signs of HH, even if not specific to the syndromes, is important for the diagnosis of patients with BWS, SS, and KS in the postnatal period.Entities:
Keywords: Beckwith-Wiedemann; Kabuki; Sotos; hypoglycemia; neonatal hyperinsulinemia
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28102591 DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.38011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Genet A ISSN: 1552-4825 Impact factor: 2.802