1. Pierpont syndrome: a collaborative study
- Author
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Wright, E.M., Suri, M., White, S.M., Leeuw, N. de, Vulto-van Silfhout, A.T., Stewart, F., McKee, S., Mansour, S., Connell, F.C., Chopra, M., Kirk, E.P., Devriendt, K., Reardon, W., Brunner, H.G., and Donnai, D.
- Subjects
plantar fat pads ,Adult ,Male ,learning disability ,Foot Deformities, Congenital ,Learning Disabilities ,Developmental Disabilities ,Karyotype ,Facies ,Syndrome ,Middle Aged ,Clinical Reports ,Craniofacial Abnormalities ,Phenotype ,fetal digital pads ,Child, Preschool ,Face ,Pierpont syndrome ,Humans ,Abnormalities, Multiple ,Female ,Genetics and epigenetic pathways of disease Genomic disorders and inherited multi-system disorders [NCMLS 6] ,Child ,Hand Deformities, Congenital ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext Pierpont syndrome is a multiple congenital anomaly syndrome with learning disability first described in 1998. There are only three patients with Pierpont syndrome who have previously been published in the literature. Details of a series of patients with features of this condition were therefore obtained retrospectively to better characterize its key features. These patients were noted to have distinctive shared facial characteristics, in addition to plantar fat pads and other limb abnormalities. Further individuals with equally striking hand and foot findings were identified whose facies were less characteristic, and hence we considered them unlikely to be affected with the same condition. Despite several patients with possible Pierpont syndrome having had high-resolution array CGH or SNP array, the etiology of this phenotype remains unknown. Whilst it is as yet unclear whether it is a single entity, there appears to be a group of patients in whom Pierpont syndrome may be a recognizable condition, with typical facies, particularly when smiling, and characteristic hand and foot findings.
- Published
- 2011