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Muenke syndrome with pigmentary disorder and probable hemimegalencephaly: An expansion of the phenotype

Authors :
Peter Bridge
Maha M. Eid
Paolo Curatolo
Ghada M H Abdel-Salam
Laura Flores-Sarnat
Jillian S. Parboosingh
Tarek H. El-Badry
Mona O. El-Ruby
Laila K. Effat
Samia A. Temtamy
Source :
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A. 155:207-214
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Wiley, 2010.

Abstract

We describe a 2-year-old boy born to healthy, consanguineous parents. He had craniofacial asymmetry with left frontal bossing, midface hypoplasia, proptosis, and low-set ears. In addition, he had curly, light hair, and oval hypomelanotic patches in the abdomen, lower limbs and back and one hyperpigmented patch in the groin without acanthosis nigricans. Cranial three-dimensional CT scan showed right-coronal, sagittal, and lambdoid suture synostoses. His cranial MRI at 2-months of age showed left hemimegalencephaly, hypoplasia of corpus callosum, and an abnormal configuration of hippocampus. In spite of these cranial findings, he had mild developmental delay and his neurological examination showed symmetric strength, tone and reflexes. Apart from febrile seizures, there was no history of epilepsy. The proband developed asymmetric hydrocephalus at the age of 18 months that required third ventriculostomy. Post-operative cranial MRI showed Chiari I- like malformation and asymmetry of cerebral hemispheres but less dysplastic cerebral cortex. Mutation analysis of FGFR3 showed a c.749C > G, p.Pro250Arg substitution. To the best of our knowledge, these manifestations have not been reported in patients with Muenke syndrome.

Details

ISSN :
15524825
Volume :
155
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cc62cc570e88ff03865ab7b55ef8a01c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.33777