期刊文献+

歌舞伎化妆综合征中的皮肤松弛症

Cutis laxa in Kabuki make- up syndrome
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摘要 Kabuki make- up syndrome (KMS; OMIM# 147920) is a multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation syndrome of unknown cause, first described independently by Niikawa and Kuroki. It is characterized by a peculiar facial appearance, mild to moderate mental retardation, skeletal abnormality, joint laxity, short stature, and unusual dermatoglyphic patterns. Several additional malformations (eg, cleft palate), cardiovascular defects, genitourinary and gastrointestinal tract anomalies, otologic and ophthalmologic abnormalities, and recurrent infections are also frequently present. It is mostly sporadic, although some familial cases have been reported. Inheritance is thought to be autosomal dominant or X- linked recessive; several chromosomal abnormalities have been found, but none of them seems to be specific to KMS. The fact that the majority of patients are sporadic and show a wide spectrum of clinical features rules out the hypothesis that KMS is a condition with a micro deletion involving several contiguous genes. We recently observed an Italian boy with typical KMS associated with cutis cutislaxa, which, to our knowledge, is an uncommon finding in KMS, never reported in more than 350 KMS cases previously described in the literature. Kabuki make- up syndrome (KMS; OMIM# 147920) is a multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation syndrome of unknown cause, first described independently by Niikawa and Kuroki. It is characterized by a peculiar facial appearance, mild to moderate mental retardation, skeletal abnormality, joint laxity, short stature, and unusual dermatoglyphic patterns. Several additional malformations (eg, cleft palate), cardiovascular defects, genitourinary and gastrointestinal tract anomalies, otologic and ophthalmologic abnormalities, and recurrent infections are also frequently present. It is mostly sporadic, although some familial cases have been reported. Inheritance is thought to be autosomal dominant or X- linked recessive; several chromosomal abnormalities have been found, but none of them seems to be specific to KMS. The fact that the majority of patients are sporadic and show a wide spectrum of clinical features rules out the hypothesis that KMS is a condition with a micro deletion involving several contiguous genes. We recently observed an Italian boy with typical KMS associated with cutis cutislaxa, which, to our knowledge, is an uncommon finding in KMS, never reported in more than 350 KMS cases previously described in the literature.
出处 《世界核心医学期刊文摘(皮肤病学分册)》 2006年第2期18-18,共1页 Digest of the World Core Medical JOurnals:Dermatology
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