Are you Frédéric Vaysse?

Claim your profile

Publications (2)3.45 Total impact

  • Article: Polyvalvular heart disease with joint hypermobility, characteristic facies, and particular skin abnormalities: new cases of "polyvalvular heart disease syndrome" or new association?
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Polyvalvular heart disease has been reported in a handful of "private" syndromes that have been recently suggested to represent a single dominantly inherited condition, the polyvalvular heart disease syndrome. We report five cases in two unrelated families (one sporadic case in the first family and three siblings and their father in the second family) with the same association of polyvalvular heart disease, distinctive facial appearance, and, except the father in family 2, major joint hypermobility. Interestingly, in three of our patients (2 siblings and the sporadic case), electron microscopy revealed characteristic ultrastructural skin abnormalities with abnormal amorphous or microfibrillar deposits under the capillary basal membrane in the papillary dermis, suggestive of a connective tissue disorder, but different from Marfan syndrome or Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. Moreover, in family 2, three others sibs died in early infancy of their heart defect. Our two families and the other published cases might illustrate intrafamilial and interfamilial variability within a single condition. However, our two families disclose major joint hypermobility, normal stature, and ultrastructural skin abnormalities that were not described in the previous reports. These discrepancies let us to consider them as affected by a distinct disorder of the connective tissue.
    European journal of medical genetics 11/2009; 53(1):29-34. · 1.57 Impact Factor
  • Article: Hypophosphatasia may lead to bone fragility: don't miss it.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Hypophosphatasia is an inheritable disorder characterised by defective bone mineralisation due to the impaired activity of tissue-non-specific alkaline phosphatase (AP). Clinical presentation ranges from stillbirth without mineralised bone to pathological fractures in late adulthood. During childhood, the main manifestations include rickets, growth delay and dental problems. Fractures and bone pain usually characterise the adult form. A 9-year-old girl was referred for repetitive fractures after minimal trauma. She had normal growth, normal sclerae, no rickets and minimal dental abnormalities. Her sister had also presented fractures. The proband, her sister and mother had low total and bone-specific AP levels and E435K mutation in exon 12 of the liver/bone/kidney AP gene. Low AP levels must lead to genetic analysis. Bone fragility and repetitive fractures may be symptoms of hypophosphatasia in childhood, which must not be neglected. Associated factors such as vitamin D or calcium deficiency must be prevented. In conclusion, hypophosphatasia must not be forgotten as an aetiological factor of repetitive fractures or bone pain in children and AP activity should be checked accurately.
    European Journal of Pediatrics 10/2008; 168(7):783-8. · 1.88 Impact Factor