Familial Congenital Micromelic Dysplasia with Dislocation of Radius and Distinct Face: a New Skeletal Dysplasia Syndrome
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Recently Maroteaux et al. [Am J Med Genet 32:371-375] described omodysplasia as a new distinct congenital bone disorder in 3 cases; autosomal dominant inheritance was suggested. In this same report, 2 other cases (patients 4 and 5) presented with the same facial and upper limb anomalies, but were also noted to have severe shortness of lower limbs. The authors considered all 5 cases to represent variable expressivity of the same disorder, namely, omodysplasia. Here we report 4 patients (3 survivors), offspring of consanguineous Arabic-Moslem couples. All presented at birth with severe short limb dwarfism and facial and radiologic appearance quite distinct from the first 3 patients of Maroteaux et al. [1989] with so-called omodysplasia. Thus, we suggest that our 4 cases and patients 4 and 5 of Maroteaux et al. [1989] represent a distinct, previously unpublished bone dysplasia.
Liegel R, Michalski M, Vaidya S, Bittermann E, Finnerty E, Menke C Development. 2023; 150(3).
PMID: 36789910 PMC: 10112907. DOI: 10.1242/dev.201038.
Novel Clinical and Radiological Findings in a Family with Autosomal Recessive Omodysplasia.
Bayat A, Duno M, Kirchhoff M, Jorgensen F, Nishimura G, Hove H Mol Syndromol. 2020; 11(2):83-89.
PMID: 32655339 PMC: 7325126. DOI: 10.1159/000506384.
Melleby A, Strand M, Romaine A, Herum K, Skrbic B, Dahl C PLoS One. 2016; 11(10):e0165079.
PMID: 27768722 PMC: 5074531. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0165079.
Campos-Xavier A, Martinet D, Bateman J, Belluoccio D, Rowley L, Tan T Am J Hum Genet. 2009; 84(6):760-70.
PMID: 19481194 PMC: 2694977. DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2009.05.002.
Recessive omodysplasia: five new cases and review of the literature.
Elcioglu N, Gustavson K, Wilkie A, Yuksel-Apak M, Spranger J Pediatr Radiol. 2003; 34(1):75-82.
PMID: 14566439 DOI: 10.1007/s00247-003-1064-9.