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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS)
encompasses deletions at the distal part of the short arm of one chromosome 4 (4p16 region). Clinical signs frequently include a typical facial appearance, mental retardation, intrauterine and postnatal growth retardation,
hypotonia
with decreased muscle bulk and seizures besides congenital heart malformations, midline defects, urinary tract malformations and brain, hearing and ophthalmologic malformations. Pathogenesis of
WHS
is multigenic and many factors are involved in prediction of prognosis such as extent of deletion, the occurrence of severe chromosome anomalies, the severe of seizures, the existence of serious internal, mainly cardiac, abnormalities and the degree of mental retardation. The phenotype of adult with
WHS
is in general similar to that of childhood being facial dysmorphism, growth retardation and mental retardation the rule in both adults and children. Avoid long-term complications and provide rehabilitation programs and genetic counseling may be essential in these patients.
...
PMID:Clinical features in adult patient with Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome. 2465 33
Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome
is caused by a deletion of the distal portion of the short arm of chromosome 4, and is characterized by psychomotor retardation, seizures, congenital malformations, and typical facial appearance including 'Greek warrior helmet' appearance of the nose. The form and the severity of clinical manifestations vary according to the size and location of the deletion. Major complications are severe growth retardation, developmental delay, seizures, feeding difficulties due to
hypotonia
, and predisposition to respiratory infections. Patients will benefit from supportive therapy and special education. It is important in terms of prognosis to provide counseling to families in this respect. We present here a case with
Wolf-Hirschhorn Syndrome
in order to remind its rarity and the ability of the patients' progress in the areas of motor skills, speech, social interaction.
...
PMID:A rare subtelomeric deletion syndrome: Wolf Hirschhorn syndrome. 2536 52
Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS)
is a syndrome with craniofacial and systemic abnormalities, which is related to 4p deletion. A 3-month old girl with an undiagnosed syndrome was referred for evaluation of the cleft lip and palate.
Hypotonia
, short stature, cardiac malformation, hypertrophied clitoris, and atypical thumb of both hands was observed. Microcephaly, low-set ear, prominent glabella, downslanting palpebral fissures, a characteristic "Greek warrior helmet" appearance, micrognathia, ears with pits/tags and bilateral incomplete cleft lip apart from incomplete cleft palate were observed as craniofacial findings. With clinical diagnosis of
WHS
, blood was subjected to karyotyping, which showed a 4p15.2 deletion, consistent with the condition. Here is reported the case of this
WHS
patient with an uncommon oral cleft extending the phenotypic spectrum of the disorder. The child was referred to a multidisciplinary team to reparative surgery of the cleft lip and palate. The patient is on regular medical follow-up and will be further assisted by dentists, physical therapists, occupational therapists and psychologists. The genotype-phenotype correlation of the affected patient with previous WSH syndrome reports is described.
...
PMID:Uncommon oral cleft in Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome. 2583 Nov 15
Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS)
represents a complex developmental disorder characterized by craniofacial dysmorphism, short stature,
hypotonia
, psychomotor retardation and seizures caused by a terminal deletion of the short arm of chromosome 4. Depending on the extent of the deletion, variable midline defects, abnormalities of the skeletal or urogenital system as well as the central nervous system are observed. Approximately 1/3 of the infants will die in the first year of life even though survival for more than 30 years has been reported. Due to current high quality standards of ultrasonography,
WHS
can often be diagnosed prenatally. We present a clinical case and provide an overview of the current literature.
...
PMID:[The Wolf-Hirschhorn Syndrome]. 2720 59
Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS)
is a rare but recurrent microdeletion syndrome associated with hemizygosity of an interstitial segment of Chromosome 4 (4p16.3). Consistent with historical reports in which overlapping deletions defined a minimal critical region in
WHS
patients, recent reports from exome sequence analysis have provided further evidence that haploinsufficiency of a specific gene within this critical region,
NSD2
(
WHSC1
), is causal for many features of the syndrome. In this report, we describe three unrelated patients with loss-of-function alterations in
NSD2
who presented clinically with
WHS
features including intrauterine growth retardation and global developmental delay. Two of the three patients also had overlapping features of failure to thrive, short stature, constipation, and
hypotonia
. This series adds additional cases to expand the phenotypic spectrum of
WHS
and reports novel
NSD2
variants.
...
PMID:De novo loss-of-function variants in
NSD2
(
WHSC1
) associate with a subset of Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome. 3117 69
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