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Publications (5)7.71 Total impact

  • Article: Epilepsy and neurological findings in 11 individuals with 1p36 deletion syndrome.
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    ABSTRACT: The 1p36 deletion syndrome is a newly delineated multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation syndrome characterized by mental retardation, growth delay, epilepsy, congenital heart defects, characteristic facial appearance, and precocious puberty. We analyzed 11 patients by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using commercially available bacterial artificial chromosome and P1-derived artificial chromosome genomic clones to define the chromosomal deletion responsible for the 1p36 deletion syndrome. Cytogenetic investigation revealed two cases with a terminal deletion of 1p36. Nine patients had an apparently normal karyotype with standard G-bands by trypsin using Giemsa (GTG), but FISH screening with the highly polymorphic genetic marker D1Z2, which is mapped to 1p36.3 and contains an unusual reiterated 40-bp variable number tandem repeat, revealed a submicroscopic deletion. All patients had severe to profound mental retardation. Based on the University of California Santa Cruz Genome Browser, we constructed a deletion map and analyzed the relationship between neurological findings and chromosomal deletions for the 11 cases. Six cases had intractable epilepsy and three had no seizures. The common deletion interval was about 1 million base pairs (Mbp) located between RP11-82D16 and RP4-785P20 (Rho guanine exchange factor (GEF) 16). The severity of clinical symptoms correlates with the size of the deletion. This is demonstrated by the 3 patients with at least 8Mbp deletions that display profound mental retardation and congenital heart defects. Although haploinsufficiency of the potassium channel beta-subunit (KCNAB2) is thought to be responsible for intractable seizures in the 1p36 deletion syndrome, this was not the case for 3 of the 11 patients in this study. Further investigation of the 1p36 region is necessary to allow identification of genes responsible for the 1p36 deletion syndrome.
    Brain and Development 09/2005; 27(5):378-82. · 2.12 Impact Factor
  • Article: Further delineation of the behavioral and neurologic features in Costello syndrome.
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    ABSTRACT: To describe clinical and neurodevelopmental phenotypes of Costello syndrome, we performed a retrospective review of the clinical records and findings in 10 children with Costello syndrome. All patients showed significant postnatal growth retardation and severe feeding difficulties leading to failure to thrive from early infancy. All required tube feeding and some needed high-calorie formulas for variable periods. Developmental quotients/IQs in seven children were 50 or less, and three were in the mildly retarded range. Five had seizures. Remarkable manifestations not previously reported were the characteristic behavior in infancy. Although happy and sociable personality was always emphasized in the genetic literature, all children showed significant irritability, including hypersensitivity to sound and tactile stimuli, sleep disturbance, and excess shyness with strangers in infancy. Those symptoms usually disappeared around age 2-4 years. Other clinical signs included cardiac abnormalities (8), musculoskeletal abnormalities (10), ophthalmological manifestations (5), increased urinary vanillymandelic acid (VMA) and homovanillic acid (HVA) (3), rhabdomyosarcoma (1), laryngomalacia (1), and cryptorchidism (1). Only three girls had papillomata. Family histories were negative for Costello syndrome. In conclusion, we confirm the wide spectrum of mental function in patients with Costello syndrome, which ranges from severe to mild. During infancy Costello syndrome showed remarkable irritability with severe feeding problems, which attributes significant difficulties to the parents of affected children.
    American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A 05/2003; 118A(1):8-14. · 2.39 Impact Factor
  • Article: Gonadal sex cord stromal tumor in a patient with Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome.
    Pediatrics International 07/2002; 44(3):330-2. · 0.63 Impact Factor
  • Article: Patellar dislocation in Kabuki syndrome.
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    ABSTRACT: We describe four individuals (two females and two males) with Kabuki syndrome and recurrent dislocation of the patella. The age of diagnosis of patellar dislocation ranged from 11 to 23 years. One individual underwent excision of the free fragment and transfer of the tibial tuberosity with good outcome. Two required patellar brace for instability. Characteristics of individuals with the syndrome at a high risk of patellar dislocation include female, adolescence or young adulthood, joint laxity, and obesity.
    American Journal of Medical Genetics 04/2002; 108(2):160-3.
  • Article: A japanese patient with X-linked α-thalassemia/mental retardation syndrome: An additional case report
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    ABSTRACT: X-linked -thalassemia/mental retardation syndrome (ATR-X) is characterized by severe mental retardation, wide range of minor abnormalities, and association with an unusual form of -thalassemia. Fifty patients in Caucasian origin have been reported. This is the second report of the syndrome demonstrated in Oriental patients.
    Journal of Human Genetics 01/1996; 41(3):329-332. · 2.57 Impact Factor