Title: Trisomy 13- Patau syndrome
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14Trisomy 13- Patau syndrome
- Mental deficiency
- Severe central nervous system malformations
- Sloping forehead malformed ears, scalp defects
15- Microphthalmia
- Bilateral cleft lip and/or palate
- Polydactyly posterior prominence of the heels.
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17Trisomy 18- Edwards syndrome
- Mental deficiency
- growth retardation
- prominent occiput short sternum ventricular
septal defect - micrognathia
- low-set malformed ears,
- flexed digits,
- hypoplastic nails rocker-bottom feet.
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19Turner syndrome- XO
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21Klinefelter syndrome- XXY trisomy
- Small testes, hyalinization of seminiferous
tubules aspermatogenesis - Often tall with disproportionately long lower
limbs. - Intelligence is less than in normal siblings.
- Approximately 40 of these males have gynecomastia
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26Cri du chat syndrome- terminal deletion
chromosome 5
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28Fragile X syndrome
- 1 in 1500 male births
- may account for much of the excess of males in
the mentally retarded population
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30Achondroplasia
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32teratogens
- Any agent that can produce a congenital anomaly
or oncrease the incidence an anomaly in the
population
33TERATOLOGY
- Study of causes, mechanisms, and patterns of
abnormal development - Basic concept is that certain stages of embryonic
development are more vulnerable to disruption
than others
34- Organs and parts of embryo are most sensitive to
teratogenic agents during periods of rapid
differentiation - Possible mechanisms of action include alteration
in intracellular matrix and fetal environment - Teratogens probably cause disruption of gene
activity at any critical stage
35Principles of teratogenesis
- Critical periods of development
- Dosage of drug or chemical
- Genetic constitution of the embryo
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38Drugs
39thalidomide
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43alcohol
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47Phenytoin
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49Viruses
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54Female hormones
- Masculinisation of female external genitalia due
to maternal use of drug during pregnancy
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56STATISTICS
- 50 of all human conceptions are lost either
before implantation or soon afterwards - 15 of recognized pregnancies end in spontaneous
abortion before 12 weeks gestation - 80-85 of aborted embryos have gross structural
abnormalities, varying from complete absence of
embryo in gestational sac blighted ovum to a
very distorted body shape, or a specified
abnormality in a single body system
57STATISTICS
- 20-30 of all perinatal deaths occur as a result
of a serious structural abnormality - In 80 of these cases, genetic factors can be
implicated, with a recurrence rate of 1 or more - 2-3 of all newborns have at least one major
abnormality - 10 newborns have minor abnormalities
58STATISTICS
- Anomalies can be single or multiple, and of minor
or major clinical significance - 14 of newborns have single minor anomaly
- Minor anomalies indicate presence of associated
major anomalies - Presence of a single umbilical artery is
associated with cardiovascular or renal anomalies - 90 of babies with 3 or more minor anomalies also
have 1 or more major defects
59STATISTICS
- If 2 or more abnormalities are present in a
newborn infant, there is a 10-20 risk of a
major malformation - 25 of newborn babies with a major malformation
die in early infancy-25 have a subsequent mental
physical disability-the remaining 50 have a fair
to good outlook after treatment
60 Causes of congenital anomalies
61Brief history
- 1941- 1st well-documented reports of maternal
rubella infection as a cause of cataracts,
cardiac defects and deafness in the offspring - Thalidomide tragedy- thalidomide was widely used
as a sedative during 1958-1962. Severe limb
anomalies were seen in babies born to mothers who
took it in 1st trimester - 40 of these babies died in early infancy due to
severe cardiac, renal or GI anomalies
62Genetic factors
- 50-60 of spontaneously aborted fetuses have
chromosomal abnormalities - 1/3rd of all congenital anomalies are caused by
genetic factors - Autosomes and/ or sex chromosomes can be affected
- Persons with chromosome abnormalities have
characteristic phenotype- they often look more
like other similarly affected persons than their
siblings
63Abnormal chromosome number
- Usually as a result of non disjunction of
homologous chromosomes or 2 chromatids of a
chromosome in mitosis or meiosis - This results in trisomy
- Down syndrome is an example of trisomy affecting
autosomes - In Klinefelter syndrome trisomy affects sex
chromosomes
64Abnormal chromosome structure
- Translocation
- Deletion
- Ring chromosome
65A, Reciprocal translocation. B, Terminal
deletion. C, Ring chromosome. D, Duplication. E,
Paracentric inversion. F, Isochromosome. G,
Robertsonian translocation..
66Gene mutation (gene defect)
- 8of all anomalies
- Loss or change in function of a gene
- Most mutations are deleterious and some are
lethal - Environmental agents such as radiation can
accelerate mutation rate - Anomalies due to gene mutation are inherited as
recessive or dominant traits
67Environmental factors
- Teratogens agents that can produce a congenital
anomaly or increase the incidence of an anomaly - Environmental factors may stimulate genetic
conditions when two or more children of normal
parents are affected - Not everything that is familial is genetic
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