| Literature DB >> 31687258 |
Piero Pavone1, Simona Domenica Marino2, Giovanni Corsello3, Martino Ruggieri1, Danilo Castellano Chiodo4, Silvia Marino2, Raffaele Falsaperla2.
Abstract
Deletion of the region including chromosome 6p25 has been defined as a syndrome, with more than 68 reported cases. Individuals affected by the syndrome exhibit variable findings, including developmental delay and intellectual disability, cardiac anomalies, dysmorphic features, and-less commonly-skeletal and renal malformations. Ocular and hearing abnormalities are the most notable presenting features. The region encompasses more than 15 genes, of which the FOX group is the most likely causal factor of the clinical manifestations. We report the case of a 2-year-old child with developmental delay, generalized hypotonia, facial dysmorphism, and anomalies involving malformations of the eyes, heart, teeth, and skeleton. The magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the child's brain displayed cerebral anomalies involving the white matter, perivascular spaces, and corpus callosum. Array-CGH (comparative genomic hybridization) analysis displayed a de novo partial deletion of the short arm of chromosome 6, extending 5.13 Mb from nt 407.231 to nt 5.541.179. In infancy, neuroradiologic findings of abnormalities in the cerebral white matter and other neurologic anomalies elsewhere in the brain, in association with dysmorphisms and malformations, are highly suggestive of the diagnosis of 6p25 deletion syndrome. When these anomalies are found, the syndrome must be included in the differential diagnosis of disorders affecting the cerebral white matter. © Thieme Medical Publishers.Entities:
Keywords: 6p25 syndrome; developmental delay; dysmorphic features; ocular lesions; white matter anomalies
Year: 2019 PMID: 31687258 PMCID: PMC6824910 DOI: 10.1055/s-0039-1694015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pediatr Genet ISSN: 2146-460X