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1q44 deletion is a rare syndrome associated with facial dysmorphism and developmental delay, in particular related with expressive speech, seizures, and hypotonia (ORPHA:238769). Until today, the distinct genetic causes for the different symptoms remain not entirely clear. We present a patient with
We report on a 4-year-old boy with short stature, microcephaly, BNS (Blitz-Nick-Salaam) seizures, and global developmental delay. In addition, small and fleshy hands and feet as well as hypoplastic scrotum and testes were observed. The clinical features of the patient are compared with the patients
We report on a father and son who have an interstitial deletion of 5p14. The father is clinically and mentally normal while the son has significant clinical involvement including microcephaly, seizures, and global developmental delay. The extent of the 5p14 deletion was determined using fluorescence
A family is described in which the father and three of his seven children have microcephaly, mild to moderate mental retardation, and sparse hair. The two affected boys have generalised seizures in addition.
BACKGROUND
Human autosomal recessive primary microcephaly (MCPH) is a heterogeneous disorder with at least six genetic loci (MCPH1-6), with MCPH5, caused by ASPM mutation, being the most common. Despite the high prevalence of epilepsy in microcephaly patients, microcephaly with frequent seizures has
We present two male sibs with a series of malformations including microcephaly, mental retardation, congenital heart disease, skeletal abnormalities, micropenis, and mild hypothyroidism. Both have had seizures. While the pattern of abnormalities is similar to that previously reported in this journal
We report the observations of three sisters with the same autosomal recessive syndrome characterized by growth retardation, microcephaly, mental deficiency, seizures, sensorineural hearing loss, and skin lesions. The congenital nature of these symptoms was confirmed by their high prevalence among
We report on two siblings with hypotonia, ambiguous genitalia, microcephaly, ptosis, microretrognathia, thin lips, seizures, absent ossification of pubic rami, and brain abnormalities at the MRI. The two siblings died at 5 and 8 months, respectively. Molecular analysis indicated that SOX9, ARX, and
Microdeletion 1q44 on the long arm of chromosome 1 leads to a phenotype that includes microcephaly, seizure, agenesis or hypogenesis of the corpus callosum, polydactyly, congenital heart defects and severe developmental delay along with characteristic facial dysmorphic signs. Until today, the
We report on a girl, born to first-cousin Lebanese parents, with severe intellectual disability, congenital hip luxation, cardiac malformation, short stature, facial dysmorphic features including microcephaly, sparse hair, bilateral epicanthal folds, ataxia, seizures, and elevated lactate and
We describe an infant who was born to a consanguineous couple of Palestinian origin. The patient had severe microcephaly, myoclonic seizures, hypsarrythmia, spasticity, hypertonicity, and profound mental retardation. A similar case was reported in another unrelated Palestinian family, suggesting
We describe two siblings, a male and a female pair, born of consanguineous parents, affected with a rare genetic form of congenital microcephaly. The clinical syndrome is characterized by early onset myoclonic seizures, spasticity, and profound psychomotor retardation without detectable brain
In males, duplication of a portion of Xq is associated with multiple congenital anomalies and developmental delay. Most females recognized as having dup(Xq) are phenotypically apparently normal relatives of phenotypically abnormal males; phenotypic normalcy has been attributed to selective
We report a consanguineous family where 2 boys presented with developmental delay, hypotonia, microcephaly, seizures, gastro-intestinal abnormalities, osteopenia, and neurological regression. Whole exome sequencing performed in one of the boys revealed the presence of a novel homozygous missense
β-Ureidopropionase deficiency (OMIM #613161) is a rare autosomal recessive inborn error of metabolism due to mutations in the UPB1 gene, which encodes the third enzyme involved in the pyrimidine degradation pathway. A total of 28 cases have been reported, mainly presenting with seizures,