| Literature DB >> 29150052 |
Malini DeSilva1, Flor M Munoz2, Erick Sell3, Helen Marshall4, Alison Tse Kawai5, Alisa Kachikis6, Paul Heath7, Nicola P Klein8, James M Oleske9, Fyezah Jehan10, Hans Spiegel11, Mirjana Nesin12, Beckie N Tagbo13, Anju Shrestha14, Clare L Cutland15, Linda O Eckert7, Sonali Kochhar16, Azucena Bardají17.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Adverse event; Brighton Collaboration; Case definition; Congenital microcephaly; GAIA; Guidelines; Immunisation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29150052 PMCID: PMC5710988 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2017.01.044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641
Causes of primary [congenital] microcephaly: overview.
Trisomy 13, 18, 21, etc. Autosomal recessive microcephaly (MCPH1-10, MCPHA) Nijmegen breakage syndrome (MIM#251260) Autosomal dominant microcephaly X-chromosomal microcephaly Aicardi–Goutieres syndrome (MIM#225750, 610329, 610181, 610333, 612952) Cockayne syndrome (MIM#216400, 133540, 216411) Cornelia de Lange syndrome (MIM#122470, 610759, 614701, 300590, 300822) Rubinstein–Taybi syndrome (MIM#180849) Feingold syndrome (MIM#164280, 614326) Rett syndrome, congenital (MIM#164874) Mowat–Wilson syndrome (MIM#235730) Smith–Lemli–Opitz syndrome (MIM#270400) Seckel syndrome (MIM#210600, 606744, 608664, 613676, 613823, 61472) Ligase IV syndrome (MIM #606593) Mutations in ATRX gene (MIM*300032) Mutations in ARX gene (MIM*300382) Mutations in PQBP1 gene (MIM*300463) Mutations in ASNS gene (MIM*108370) Borjeson–Forssman–Lehmann syndrome (MIM#301900) Angelman syndrome (MIM#105830) Serine biosynthesis disorder Sterol biosynthesis disorder Mitochondriopathy, e.g. pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency Congenital disorders of glycosylation syndrome Rare congenital metabolic diseases (see text) Toxoplasmosis, rubella, cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex, varicella zoster virus, syphilis, human immunodeficiency virus, Zika Virus Teratogens Alcohol, cocaine, antiepileptic drugs, lead/mercury intoxication, radiation Vascular incident (stroke), intrauterine death of twin Hyperphenylalaninaemia Maternal anorexia nervosa |
Reproduced with permission from Von der Hagen et al. [22].
Not included in original table from Von der Hagen et al.
Fig. 1Measuring Head Circumference (image reproduced from reference CDC’s response to Zika [56]).
Fig. 2Reproduced from reference [59]. The level of the cross-section through the fetal head for correct measurement (A). The image (B) is well magnified, the head is horizontal, oval in shape and symmetrical. The landmarks are seen with a centrally positioned and continuous midline falx cerebri (1), the midline echo is broken anteriorly at one-third of its length by the cavum septi pellucidi (2) and the thalami are located symmetrically (3). Callipers, are placed so that their intersection is on the outer border of the bones (C). When using the ellipse facility this should run along the outer border of the skull (D).
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| ● | - 1st trimester (⩽13 6/7 weeks) |
| - 2nd trimester scan (14 0/7–27 6/7 weeks) | |
| - 3rd trimester (28 0/7 + weeks) | |
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