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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (hernia)
15,856 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In 1979 Cohen et Hayden and in 1983 Wiedemann et al. delineated a syndrome consisting of partial gigantism of the hands and/or feet, nevi, hemihypertrophy, subcutaneous tumors, macrocephaly or other skull anomalies and possible accelerated growth and visceral affections. Hitherto the literature pertaining to this syndrome consists of somewhat more than 100 cases of which some, that have been described previously or subsequently under other headings, were rediagnosed as being Proteus syndromes. Of these, more than half show vascular anomalies closely resembling those observed in the Klippel-Trenaunay syndrome, but in the Proteus syndrome appear to be more haphazardly distributed over the integument. We report 3 pediatric patients with the Proteus syndrome, all showing cutaneous angiodysplasias. These patients were initially diagnosed as suffering from "severe or atypical Klippel-Trenaunay syndrome". In one of these, cardiac tumors were observed soon after birth which subsequently showed spontaneous involution and were therefore considered to be rhabdomyomas. In the Proteus syndrome cardiac pathology is rare, and cardiac tumors have not been described previously. Moreover, we observed umbilical hernia in two of our patients, a feature which has hitherto not been reported in patients with the Proteus syndrome. In all our patients a broad thoracic cage resembling a "body-builders chest", asymmetrical and disproportional macrodactyly and broad, flat feet were conspicuous. These broad, flat feet with macrodactyly and large spaces between the first and second digits were designed by the parents of one of our patient as "chimpanzee's feet". Macrodactyly, "chimp's" feet and a broad thoracic cage are considered by us to be clinical hallmarks of the Proteus syndrome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Proteus syndrome. Expansion of the phenotype. Apropos of 3 pediatric cases]. 133 4

We describe a girl with the cardio-facio-cutaneous (CFC) syndrome. She presented most of the characteristics of the new multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome: unusual facial appearance and ectodermal symptoms, that is, abnormal hair and skin, ventricular septum defect, relative macrocephaly with large ventricles and cortical "atrophy," submucous cleft palate, and umbilical hernia. Her twin brother died shortly after birth and may have had the same malformation syndrome.
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PMID:Cardio-facio-cutaneous (CFC) syndrome: report of a new patient. 259 5

The present report describes on a 1-year-old girl with macrocephaly, bulging forehead, ocular hypertelorism, antimongoloid palpebral slant, convergent strabismus, atrophy of optic papillae, short philtrum, protruding lips, high-arched palate, bifid uvula, broad trunk, apparently widely spaced nipples, diastasis recti, small umbilical hernia, tapering fingers, fifth-finger clinodactyly, postaxial polydactyly of the left hand, and bilateral hallux duplication. Partial agenesis of the corpus callosum and central diffuse cortical cerebral atrophy was documented on computed tomography. Chromosomes were normal. Parents were related as half first cousins. Their previous pregnancy had ended in a miscarriage. We suggest that this patient has an acrocallosal syndrome inherited as an autosomal recessive trait. This supports other recent reports that have considered this entity to differ from Greig cephalopolysyndactyly.
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PMID:Acrocallosal syndrome in a girl born to consanguineous parents. 272 48

Two unrelated patients, a 4-year-old boy and a 2 1/2-year-old girl, presented with a similar pattern of abnormalities. Both had severe mental retardation, macrocephaly, absence of the corpus callosum, unusual facial appearance, duplication of hallucal phalanges, postaxial hexadactyly of finger phalanges, and 2/3-syndactyly of toes. The boy also had postaxial hexadactyly of toe phalanges, inguinal hernias and umbilical hernia, and growth retardation. We suspect a common cause of this apparently "new" syndrome, most likely a gene mutation.
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PMID:Hallux duplication, postaxial polydactyly, absence of the corpus callosum, severe mental retardation, and additional anomalies in two unrelated patients: a new syndrome. 742 76

We report on a pair of monozygotic twins with Fryns syndrome discordant for severity of diaphragmatic defect. Both twins had macrocephaly, "coarse" facial appearance, hypoplasia of distal phalanges, and an extra pair of ribs. Twin A lacked an apparent diaphragmatic defect, and at 1 year of age had mild developmental delay. Twin B had a left congenital diaphragmatic hernia and died neonatally. Absence of diaphragmatic defect in Fryns syndrome may represent a subpopulation of more mildly affected patients whose developmental outcome is currently undetermined.
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PMID:Discordant phenotype in monozygotic twins with Fryns syndrome. 1148 14

Genetic ablation experiments are used to resolve problems regarding cell lineages and the in vivo function of certain groups of cells. We describe a two-component conditional ablation technology using a mouse carrying an X-linked puDeltatk transgene, which is only activated in cells expressing Cre. Ablation of the Cre-expressing cells can be temporally regulated by the time of ganciclovir (GCV) administration. This strategy was demonstrated using a Col2Cre transgenic line. Differentiating chondrocytes in bigenic animals could be ablated at different developmental stages resulting in disorganized growth plates and dwarfism. Macrocephaly, macroglossia and umbilical hernia were also observed in ablated 18.5 dpc embryos. Crosses between the puDeltatk selector transgenic line and existing cre lines will facilitate numerous temporally regulated tissue-specific ablation experiments.
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PMID:Bigenic Cre/loxP, puDeltatk conditional genetic ablation. 1556 96

Simpson-Golabi-Behmel syndrome (SGBS) is an overgrowth/multiple congenital anomalies syndrome with an X-linked inheritance. Most cases of SGBS are attributed to mutations in the glypican 3-gene (GPC3), which is highly expressed in the mesodermal embryonic tissues and involves in a local growth regulation. Typical clinical features include pre/postnatal overgrowth, developmental delay, macrocephaly, characteristic facies with prominent eyes and macroglossia, diaphragmatic hernia, congenital heart defects, kidney anomalies, and skeletal anomalies. Obligate carrier females with GPC3 mutations are usually asymptomatic or with mild symptoms. It is thought that skewed X-inactivation is the underlining mechanism for the female patients to present with findings of SGBS. We identified three siblings with typical SGBS (two male and one female cases) and their mother with very mild symptoms in a family carrying c.256C>T (p.Arg86X) mutation in GPC3. X-inactivation studies on the androgen-receptor gene (AR) and the Fragile XE (FRAXE) gene were performed with blood, buccal swabs, and fibroblasts in the carrier females. The studies with blood showed moderately skewed X-inactivation with paternal X-chromosome being preferentially inactivated (71-80% inactivated) in the female patient with SGBS and no skewing was shown in the mother with very mild symptoms. The X-inactivation studies in the mother showed inactivation of the X-chromosome with the mutation by 57%. This suggests that loss of the functional GPC3 protein by 43% is closed to the threshold to develop the SGBS phenotype. Studies with buccal swabs and fibroblasts failed to show different X-inactivation patterns between the two female individuals.
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PMID:Familial Simpson-Golabi-Behmel syndrome: studies of X-chromosome inactivation and clinical phenotypes in two female individuals with GPC3 mutations. 2095 Mar 95

We report a newborn with Fryns syndrome and atypical findings like a large midline cleft on forehead. Abnormal findings included congenital left diaphragmatic hernia, prominent forehead, hypertelorism, broad nasal bridge, anteverted nostrils, cleft palate, low set ears, tapered fingers, macrocephaly, congenital heart defect, midline defects and renal anomalies. This is the first case that has a midline cleft on forehead with normal cranial MRI findings.
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PMID:Fryns syndrome with atypical findings--with large midline cleft on forehead but normal cranial MRI findings. 2129 Sep 70

BMP4 loss-of-function mutations and deletions have been shown to be associated with ocular, digital, and brain anomalies, but due to the paucity of these reports, the full phenotypic spectrum of human BMP4 mutations is not clear. We screened 133 patients with a variety of ocular disorders for BMP4 coding region mutations or genomic deletions. BMP4 deletions were detected in two patients: a patient affected with SHORT syndrome and a patient with anterior segment anomalies along with craniofacial dysmorphism and cognitive impairment. In addition to this, three intragenic BMP4 mutations were identified. A patient with anophthalmia, microphthalmia with sclerocornea, right-sided diaphragmatic hernia, and hydrocephalus was found to have a c.592C >T (p.R198X) nonsense mutation in BMP4. A frameshift mutation, c.171dupC (p.E58RfsX17), was identified in two half-siblings with anophthalmia/microphthalmia, discordant developmental delay/postaxial polydactyly, and poor growth as well as their unaffected mother; one affected sibling carried an additional BMP4 mutation in the second allele, c.362A > G (p.H121R). This is the first report indicating a role for BMP4 in SHORT syndrome, Axenfeld-Rieger malformation, growth delay, macrocephaly, and diaphragmatic hernia. These results significantly expand the number of reported loss-of-function mutations, further support the critical role of BMP4 in ocular development, and provide additional evidence of variable expression/non-penetrance of BMP4 mutations.
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PMID:BMP4 loss-of-function mutations in developmental eye disorders including SHORT syndrome. 2134 Jun 93

PIK3CA-Related Overgrowth Spectrum (PROS) encompass a group of disorders which are mainly characterized by segmental overgrowth of several tissues as well as venous and lymphatic malformations. It is caused by heterozygous, usually somatic mosaic, pathogenic variants in the PIK3CA gene. However, some patients presenting mainly isolated megalencephaly or "Cowden-like" features have been described harboring constitutional mutations of PIK3CA. Here, we report the case of a woman whose pregnancy was interrupted at 34 weeks of gestation after the detection of the following ultrasound abnormalities: left diaphragmatic hernia with intrathoracic stomach, right deviation of heart, intrathoracic double bubble sign, macrocephaly and polyhydramnios. Fetal autopsy contributed to better characterize the phenotype, showing megalencephaly, left diaphragmatic eventration, facial dysmorphism (hypertelorism, abnormal hair line implantation) and duplication of distal portion of the small bowel. Clinical exome sequencing identified a de novo constitutional variant c.1030G>A p.(Val344Met) in PIK3CA. Although this mutation has been previously described (as constitutional variant) in pediatric patients, our case represents the first detailed description of the prenatal features found in association with a constitutional PIK3CA mutation. Moreover, this case contributes to delineate novel features (diaphragmatic eventration and duplication of the distal part of the small bowel) which could be identified in association with PROS.
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PMID:Novel features of PIK3CA-Related Overgrowth Spectrum: Lesson from an aborted fetus presenting a de novo constitutional PIK3CA mutation. 3156 61


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