| Literature DB >> 31759541 |
Chih-Ping Chen1, Fang-Yu Hung2, Schu-Rern Chern3, Shin-Wen Chen4, Fang-Tzu Wu4, Dai-Dyi Town4, Wayseen Wang5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We present prenatal diagnosis of mosaicism for trisomy 7 in a single colony at amniocentesis with a favorable outcome. CASE REPORT: A 40-year-old woman underwent amniocentesis at 17 weeks of gestation because of advanced maternal age. Amniocentesis revealed a result of 47,XY,+7[1]/46,XY[26]. In 27 colonies of cultured amniocytes, all five cells in one colony had trisomy 7, while the rest 26 colonies had a normal karyotype. The parental karyotypes were normal. Repeat amniocentesis was performed at 19 weeks of gestation. Interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) was applied on the uncultured amniocytes, and the result showed trisomy 7 signals in 4% (3/75 cells) of the uncultured amniocytes compared with 1.4% (1/70 cells) in the normal control. Uniparental disomy (UPD) 7 was excluded by polymorphic DNA marker analysis. The cultured amniocytes at repeat amniocentesis had a karyotype of 46,XY. Prenatal ultrasound findings were unremarkable. A healthy 3332-g male baby was delivered at 38 weeks of gestation. The karyotype of cord blood lymphocytes was 46,XY. The boy was phenotypically normal at age 8 months at follow-up. No trisomy 7 signal could be detected in the postnatal FISH analysis of the urinary cells.Entities:
Keywords: Amniocentesis; Mosaicism; Prenatal diagnosis; Single colony; Trisomy 7
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31759541 DOI: 10.1016/j.tjog.2019.09.022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Taiwan J Obstet Gynecol ISSN: 1028-4559 Impact factor: 1.705