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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixteen children with anomalies of the auricle and/or middle ear who presented malformations of the face, mouth, upper airway, spine, limbs, heart, gastrointestinal (GI), and/or genitourinary (GU) systems, were described. While clusters of anomalies suggested syndromes such as the oculo-auriculo-vertebral syndrome of Goldenhar, hamifacial microsomia, mandibulo-facial dysostosis (Treacher Collins syndrome),
Pierre Robin
, Klippel-Feil, Moebius, Duane, and/or VATER syndromes, many children did not fit what are usually considered even minimal criteria for these syndromes. Several children had malformations which fit the description of more than one syndrome. The importance of investigating the children for unsuspected anomalies, especially of the GU system, was emphasized. Life threatening problems in this group consisted of airway problems, congenital
heart disease
, and major anomalies of the GI and GU systems. Better management of sucking, swallowing and airway problems might have decreased the early morbidity and mortality (3/16) in this group. Children with multiple defacing anomalies may not be mentally retarded so that aggressive management of their visceral anomalies and hearing problems, and early educational intervention are mandatory. Delay in development may be due to hearing loss, vestibular impairment, ataxia, the consequences of early malnutrition, and multiple hospitalizations rather than to mental retardation. A pessimistic attitude in infancy is unwarranted since it is impossible to predict which children will end up competitive individuals.
...
PMID:Patterns of anomalies in children with malformed ears. 96 14
A safe and easily employed method of removal of a blunt foreign body from the oesophagus is described. The present case was a newly born infant with
Pierre Robin's syndrome
and congenital
heart disease
. A nasal tube had become displaced and the clinical condition did not permit endoscopic removal. By means of an inflatable balloon catheter introduced through the tube to the stomach, the foreign body could be removed without difficulty.
...
PMID:[Removal of a displaced nasopharyngeal tube from the esophagus using an inflated catheter]. 194 91
From 1958 to March 1987 we corrected 704 patients with pectus excavatum. The condition occurred more frequently in boys (544 patients) than girls (160 patients). In the majority of patients (86%), the defect was evident at birth or within the first year of life. Musculoskeletal abnormalities were identified in 133 patients (scoliosis, 107; kyphosis, 4; myopathy, 3; Poland's syndrome, 3; Marfan's syndrome, 2;
Pierre Robin syndrome
, 2; prune belly syndrome, 2; neurofibromatosis, 3; cerebral palsy, 4; tuberous sclerosis, 1; and congenital diaphragmatic hernia, 2). Sixteen patients had associated congenital
heart disease
. A family history of chest wall deformity was present in 37% of the cases and a history of scoliosis in 11%. Surgical correction was performed using a uniform technique for bilateral subperichondrial resection of the deformed costal cartilages and sternal osteotomy resecting a wedge of the anterior cortex and fracturing the posterior cortex. Anterior displacement was maintained with silk sutures closing the osteotomy defect. In 28 early cases, the sternum was secured by intramedullary fixation with a Steinman pin. All repairs were completed with a low complication rate (4.4%; pneumothorax, 11; wound infection, 5; wound hematoma, 3; wound dehiscence, 5; pneumonia, 3; seroma, 1; hemoptysis, 1; hemopericardium, 1). Six complications were associated with Steinman pin fixation (hemoptysis, seroma, hemopericardium, pneumothorax, 3). Major recurrence occurred in 17 patients (2.7%) and led to revision in 12. Satisfactory long-term results were achieved in the remaining 687 patients, with follow-up ranging from 2 weeks to 27 years. Mean follow-up was 4.3 years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Surgical repair of pectus excavatum. 320 60
A two-year-old female with the
Pierre Robin
anomaly and bilateral index finger malformations is described. Hypertelorism, full cheeks, posteriorly rotated ears with prominent antihelix, short neck, simian creases, bilateral fifth finger clinodactyly, and short toes with hypoplastic small nails were also present. Her mother had a subsequent pregnancy that resulted in the delivery at 26 weeks, of a stillborn female fetus with cleft palate, index finger anomalies and congenital
heart disease
. These two patients are the first females reported with this group of anomalies. The etiology of this combination of malformations, the Catel-Manzke syndrome, is unknown.
...
PMID:Pierre Robin anomaly with an accessory metacarpal of the index fingers. The Catel-Manzke syndrome. 395 70
The
Pierre Robin syndrome
consists of micrognathia, pseudo-macroglossia, glossoptosis and a high arched or cleft palate. Difficult intubation of the trachea and associated abnormalities such as congenital
heart disease
are well known complications of this syndrome. Intraoral surgery (such as cleft palate repair and palatoplasty) can also be technically difficult for the surgeon resulting in prolonged retraction on the tongue with a mouth gag to provide adequate surgical exposure. We report a case where massive lingual oedema following a cleft palate repair resulted in life-threatening airway obstruction.
...
PMID:Airway obstruction due to massive lingual oedema following cleft palate surgery. 400 77
The combination of tracheoesophageal and pulmonary malformations is unusual and reportedly carries a high mortality. We have observed six patients with esophageal atresia and tracheoesophageal fistula and one with a bronchoesophageal fistula who had associated bronchopulmonary anomalies ranging from lobar hypoplasia and agenesis to unilateral pulmonary hypoplasia or agenesis. All of the pulmonary malformations were right-sided. Vertebral or rib anomalies were present in five patients, congenital
heart disease
in two, imperforate anus in one and one patient had radial aplasia and
Pierre Robin syndrome
. The bronchopulmonary anomalies complicated the surgical care of tracheoesophageal malformations and required radiologic differentiation from aspiration pneumonia and atelectasis. Six of the seven patients survived. Mortality and morbidity were related to complications and associated cardiac anomalies as well as severity of the lung anomaly.
...
PMID:A spectrum of bronchopulmonary anomalies associated with tracheoesophageal malformations. 405 63
The entire infant population of the Tufts-New England Medical Center Cleft Palate Clinic was reviewed, and the prevalence rates of congenital cardiac anomalies were calculated. The overall prevalence rate of congenital
heart disease
among the facial cleft clinic population was 6.7%, with a prevalence rate of 9.1% among patients with submucous cleft palate, 7.7% with congenital palato-pharyngeal incompetence, 0% with cleft lip only, 5.3% with unilateral cleft lip and palate, 12.5% with bilateral cleft lip and palate, 4.3% with cleft palate only, 13.6% with Pierre-
Robin
anomaly, 7.1% with cleft lip and palate and a syndrome diagnosis, 16.7% with cleft palate and a syndrome diagnosis.
...
PMID:The prevalence of congenital heart disease among the population of a metropolitan cleft lip and palate clinic. 693 98
Toriello-Carey syndrome comprises agenesis of the corpus callosum, telecanthus, small palpebral fissures,
Pierre Robin sequence
, abnormal ears, nuchal laxity and cardiac defects. We report on a female patient who has some additional findings including an anteriorly placed anus. This anomaly adds to the list of other midline anomalies seen in this syndrome. We compare the findings to those seen in the Opitz BBBG syndrome, a well-defined syndrome of the midline developmental field. Our patient, having a severe manifestation of complicated congenital
heart disease
, died in the neonatal period, which argues against the likelihood that this is an X-linked disorder with more severe manifestations in males.
...
PMID:Toriello-Carey syndrome: case report with additional findings. 1116 67
We report a family showing autosomal-dominant segregation of upper- and lower-eyelid distichiasis (double row of eyelashes) in seven affected relatives over three generations, in addition to below-knee lymphedema of pubertal onset (lymphoedema proecox) in three. Two children had cleft palate in addition to distichiasis, but without the previously reported association with the
Pierre-Robin sequence
. Other ophthalmologic anomalies included divergent strabismus and early-onset myopia. This family was found to be completely linked to markers mapped to 16q24.3 and thereby proposed to be allelic to the distichiasis-lymphedema syndrome (DL, MIM 153400), although pterygium colli, congenital
heart disease
, or facial dysmorphism were not features found here. As FOXC2/FKLH14 mutations were found to underlie DL and diverse hereditary lymphedema conditions, this gene was examined by sequence analysis. An out-of-frame deletion (914-921del) was identified and found to segregate with the disease, further highlighting the phenotypic heterogeneity of lymphedema conditions linked to FOXC2 truncating mutations. Whether such heterogeneity is related to genotype-phenotype correlation, a hypothesis not primarily supported by the apparent loss-of-function mechanism of the mutations, or governed by modifying genes, remains to be determined.
...
PMID:FOXC2 truncating mutation in distichiasis, lymphedema, and cleft palate. 1248 95
Providing clinically relevant prognoses and treatment information for people with a chromsome18q deletion is particularly challenging because every unrelated person has a unique region of hemizygosity. The hemizygous region can involve almost any region of 18q including between 1 and 101 genes (30 Mb of DNA). Most individuals have terminal deletions, but in our cohort of over 350 individuals 23% have interstitial deletions. Because of this heterogeneity, we take a gene by gene approach to understanding the clinical consequences. There are 196 genes on 18q. We classified 133 of them as dosage insensitive, 15 (8%) as dosage sensitive leading to haploinsufficiency while another 10 (5%) have effects that are conditionally haploinsufficient and are dependent on another factor, genetic or environmental in order to cause an abnormal phenotype. Thirty-seven genes (19%) have insufficient information to classify their dosage effect. Phenotypes attributed to single genes include: congenital
heart disease
, minor bone morphology changes, central nervous system dysmyelination, expressive speech delay, vesicouretreral reflux, polyposis, Pitt-Hopkins syndrome, intellectual disability, executive function impairment, male infertility, aural atresia, and high frequency sensorineural hearing loss. Additionally, identified critical regions for other phenotypes include: adolescent idiopathic scoliosis and pectus excavatum, Virchow-
Robin
perivascular spaces, small corpus callosum, strabismus, atopic disorders, mood disorder, IgA deficiency, nystagmus, congenital
heart disease
, kidney malformation, vertical talus, CNS dysmyelination growth hormone deficiency and cleft palate. Together these findings make it increasingly feasible to compile an individualized syndrome description based on each person's individuated genotype. Future work will focus on understanding molecular mechanisms leading to treatment.
...
PMID:Consequences of chromsome18q deletions. 2623 40
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