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Query: UMLS:C0264733 (
ventricular dilatation
)
2,163
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 3570 gram male newborn was born to a 29-year-old mother at the gestational age of 40 weeks with gross abnormalities of flexion contracture of third and fifth fingers and fourth toes bilaterally. After birth, cyanotic spell while feeding was found, and a series of examinations were done. The abnormalities were focused on brain echogram, computed tomogram and magnetic resonance imaging examination, which showed a large posterior fossa cyst, cerebellar hypoplasia complicated with multiple severe supratentorial anomalies, including marked
ventricular dilatation
, cerebral
agyria
, agenesis of corpus callosum, absence of thalamus and basal ganglion, and optic nerve atrophy. Clinically, the patient had neonatal seizure and high fever. The diagnosis of Dandy-Walker complex type A was made according to the new classification presented by Barkovick et al. in 1989.
...
PMID:[Dandy-Walker complex with multiple anomalies: report of one case]. 206 87
Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS) is an autosomal recessive disorder manifest by characteristic brain and eye malformations. We reviewed data on 21 of our patients and an additional 42 patients from the literature. From this review, we expand the phenotype to include congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD) and cleft lip and/or palate (CLP), and revise the diagnostic criteria. Four abnormalities were present in all patients checked for these anomalies: type II
lissencephaly
(21/21), cerebellar malformation (20/20), retinal malformation (18/18), and CMD (14/14). We propose that these comprise necessary and sufficient diagnostic criteria for WWS. Two other frequently observed abnormalities,
ventricular dilatation
with or without hydrocephalus (20/21) and anterior chamber malformation (16/21), are helpful but not necessary diagnostic criteria because they were not constant. All other abnormalities occurred less frequently. Congenital macrocephaly with hydrocephalus (11/19) was more common than congenital microcephaly (3/19). Dandy-Walker malformation (10/19) was sometimes associated with posterior cephalocele (5/21). Additional abnormalities included slit-like ventricles (1/21), microphthalmia (8/21), ocular colobomas (3/15), congenital cataracts (7/20), genital anomalies in males (5/8), and CLP (4/21). Median survival in our series was 9 months. A related autosomal recessive disorder, Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy, consists of similar but less severe brain changes and CMD. It differs from WWS because of consistently less frequent and severe cerebellar and retinal abnormalities. We think that WWS is identical to "cerebro-oculo-muscular syndrome" and "muscle, eye, and brain disease."
...
PMID:Diagnostic criteria for Walker-Warburg syndrome. 236 44
The neuropathological findings at autopsy in four cases of type I and three of type II
lissencephaly
are presented. Type I
lissencephaly
is characterized by agyriapachygyria with a markedly thickened cerebral cortex with four coarse histological layers. The normally myelinated white matter, often with neuronal heterotopias, is very narrow, and the gray-to-white matter ratio is inverted (about 4:1); there are no white-gray interdigitations. Claustrum and capsula extrema are absent.
Ventricular dilatation
is present, especially of the occipital horns. In the hypoplastic brain stem large olivary heterotopias can often be observed. Severe cerebellar malformations, obstructive hydrocephalus, severe eye abnormalities, and congenital muscular dystrophy are not seen. Clinically, type I
lissencephaly
presents as "isolated
lissencephaly
sequence" or as "Miller-Dieker syndrome" with characteristic facial dysmorphism. The long survival of 20 years achieved by one of our patients is very uncommon. Type II lissencephaly is characterized by widespread
agyria
. Usually, obstructive hydrocephalus is present with a thin cerebral mantle showing a slightly thickened cortex and a narrow, hypomyelinated white matter often with neuronal heterotopias (gray-to-white matter ratio about 1:1). The border between gray and white matter is blurred. Claustrum and capsula extrema are absent. Histologically, the cortex appears disorganized without layering; widespread leptomeningeal gliomesenchymal proliferations and glioneuronal heterotopias are present.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Neuropathology of lissencephalies. 830 54
A 3-month-old female baby was diagnosed as having Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS), based on the following clinical findings: type II
lissencephaly
associated with marked
ventricular dilatation
, cerebellar malformation, retinal malformation, elevated serum creatine kinase level and abnormal muscle CT findings. She was a product of parents with consanguineous marriage. She presented with severe hypotonia and profound psychomotor retardation since birth. She developed infantile spasms at 8 months of age, and vitamin B6 was very effective. A genetic analysis revealed the absence of the founder haplotype commonly seen in Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), suggesting that the WWS gene is not always identical to the FCMD gene. When she was examined at the age of 4 years, she had no apparent further psychomotor development. Her clinical symptoms were more severe than those of the typical FCMD.
...
PMID:[A patient of Walker-Warburg syndrome with a haplotype different from that in Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy]. 1048 70
We report on two siblings with Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS) born to a consanguineous couple. In the index case, the second-trimester scan showed
ventricular dilatation
and we diagnosed WWS after observing retinal detachment at 26 weeks' gestation and
lissencephaly
by 32 weeks' gestation in addition to hypoplasia of the cerebellar vermis. The second case was first suspected at 12 weeks' gestation, when we observed a 2.8-mm nuchal translucency and an unusually large hindbrain vesicle. By 14 weeks' gestation, the lateral ventricles were clearly enlarged (12-13 mm), at 16 weeks' gestation the vitreous chamber appeared to be hyperechogenic, and by 17 weeks' gestation hydrocephalus was evident. The couple chose to continue the pregnancy, and during the third trimester
lissencephaly
, major hydrocephalus and polyhydramnios developed. Serial ultrasound examination should be offered to a family with a history of WWS and therefore a 1 in 4 risk of recurrence. In some cases, recurrence can be suspected as early as the first trimester, however the diagnosis cannot be excluded on the basis of normal ultrasound appearance until later in pregnancy.
...
PMID:First-trimester ultrasound diagnosis in a recurrent case of Walker-Warburg syndrome. 1608 20
A neonatal case of provisional neurocutaneous melanosis presenting with
lissencephaly
is reported. Several congenital nevi were observed on the trunk and extremities of the infant, including a giant congenital hairy nevus over the skull. Brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed a marked
ventricular dilatation
with pachygyria and an absent corpus callosum; however, an injection of gadolinium did not demonstrate any enhanced lesions. Histopathological investigations by a brain biopsy showed a disorganized and anomalous embryonic cerebral architecture, suggesting
lissencephaly
. The detailed mechanism of this combined pathology is difficult to explain; however, a developmental disturbance was suggested to be present in both the neural crest cells and the neuroepithelial cells, resulting in the development of neurocutaneous melanosis accompanied with
lissencephaly
.
...
PMID:Large congenital melanocytic nevi presenting with lissencephaly with an absent corpus callosum. 1845 92