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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
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11,717
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To report ophthalmic findings of patients without colobomas, and with a clinical and molecular diagnosis of CHARGE
Syndrome
. Retrospective study of ophthalmic findings in 67 CHARGE patients-clinically confirmed diagnosis with positive CHD7 mutation-seen in the Ophthalmology department of Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center between January 1, 2008 through September 25, 2018. Criteria for inclusion in this study was absence of any form of a coloboma in either eye. In our cohort, all patients had a positive CHD7 mutation, in addition to a clinical diagnosis. 19.4% (13/67) of CHARGE patients did not have a coloboma in either eye. 69.2% (9/13) had strabismus, 76.9% (10/13) had a refractive error that warranted refractive correction, 23.1% (3/13) had amblyopia, 38.5% (5/13) had nasolacrimal duct obstruction, 30.8% (4/13) had dry eye syndrome and exposure keratopathy, 15.4% (2/13) had
ptosis
, 15.4% (2/13) had blepharitis, 15.4% (2/13) had Cortical Visual Impairment, 7.7% (1/13) of patients had optic nerve drusen, 7.7% (1/13) had Marcus Gunn Jaw Winking, and 7.7% (1/13) with an eyelid nevus. There are numerous ophthalmic findings in individuals with CHARGE
Syndrome
without colobomas. No study to date has evaluated the ophthalmic findings in CHD7 positive CHARGE patients without colobomas. These findings need to be assessed and treated to ensure optimal vision in the CHARGE patient population. Absence of coloboma does not rule out a diagnosis of CHARGE syndrome, and if there is a clinical suspicion, clinical confirmation then genetic testing would be warranted.
...
PMID:CHARGE syndrome without colobomas: Ophthalmic findings. 3291 32
Marcus Gunn
Syndrome
(MGS), mostly occurring in congenital
ptosis
patients, is characterized by jaw movement evoking ptotic eyelid retraction, followed by collapse. Inverted, bilateral and acquired MGS were also reported. Some cases manifest MGS only temporarily in life. These features suggest MGS may be due to multiple pathogeneses, which are still unclear. People also classify MGS as a kind of trigeminal oculomotor synkenesis (TOS), like Duane syndrome (DS), in which ocular adduction prompts eyelid moving or eyeball retraction. The most popular hypothesis for TOS is congenital miswiring, as evidence supporting this hypothesis is found in DS cases: hypoplasia abducens nerve fusing with a branch of oculomotor nerve is observed. Seven mutant genes have been identified associated with TOS and two of them are found among MGS cases. Accordingly, these mutant genes may dominate cranial nerve misconnection and generate TOS. However, unlike in DS case, evidence of miswiring is not encountered in most MGS cases. The fact is that two "MGS genes" are from congenital fibrosis of extraocular muscle (CFEOM) cases presenting with associated MGS. But most of MGS cases do not suffer CFEOM. Thus, mutant genes dominated congenital miswiring may not be the pathogenesis for the majority of MGS. As an alternate pathogenic pathway, a "release hypothesis" proposed that MGS is a primitive physiologic reflex that became suppressed during phylogenetic development but could be released under certain pathologic conditions. This hypothesis was and is overlooked because the hypothesized reflex arc has not been defined. Decades ago, a neural tract tracing study in Xenopus revealed a direct projection from masticator afferent mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus (Vme) neurons to oculomotor and trochlear nucleus (III/IV). In clinical studies, co-firing of pterygoid muscle and levator palpebrae was recorded by electromyography during onset of MGS, and stimulating pterygoid muscle nerve elicited eyelid retraction. Recently, retraction of the ipsilateral eyelid by stimulating the trigeminal motor root was even observed in cases without congenital
ptosis
and MGS, highlighting the existence of a latent pathway. In rats, recently we demonstrated projections from the Vme neurons to the III/IV, and to their premotor neurons in interstitial nucleus of Cajal by neural tract tracing and electrophysiologic studies. Fos expression in pre-oculomotor neurons was induced by repeated down stretching the lower jaw. Combining previous and our own studies, we assumed the Vme neurons is excited when jaw moves and in turn, some eyelid activity related III motoneurons are activated through projections of Vme to oculomotor system, like in Xenopus. Genetic factors may dominate to what extent this primitive reflex-arc is preserved, which consequently determines phenotype.
...
PMID:A reformed "release hypothesis" for Marcus Gunn Syndrome, based on newer clinic observations and experimental evidences. 3325 17
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