Aprenda sobre a trissomia do cromossomo 13 – Síndrome de Patau (Vídeo)

Este vídeo é uma coleção de fotos de crianças com trissomia do cromossomo 13. Assista e aprenda um pouco mais sobre este desarranjo genético.


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Natural Outcome of Trisomy 13, Trisomy 18, and Triploidy After Prenatal Diagnosis

Introduction
 
Trisomy 18 (Edwards syndrome) and trisomy 13 (Patau syndrome) are, along with trisomy 21 (Down syndrome), the most common autosomal aneuploidies in the newborn, with a prevalence at birth of between one in 3,000 and one in 15,000 [Smith, 1964; Carter et al., 1985; Baty et al., 1994; Hasslod and Hunt, 2001].
Triploidy belongs to the polyploid types, and is estimated to occur in 1–2% of recognized human conceptuses. Most pregnancies with triploidy, however, are aborted spontaneously in early gestation so that the prevalence at birth of triploidy is rare: approximately one in 50,000 newborns [Doshi et al., 1983; McFadden and Kalousek, 1991].
 
All these chromosomal abnormalities belong to disorders which are compatible with life, but which are also associated with a high rate of spontaneous abortion, intrauterine death, and a short life span. [O’Connor, 2008].
 

Over the last 30 years, prenatal diagnosis of these disorders has improved due to the increasing use of fetal ultrasound screening methods in the first and second trimesters, and invasive diagnostic methods such as amniocenteses. In Austria, as in many other countries, parents are given the opportunity to terminate a pregnancy (artificially induced abortion) if a severe fetal disorder has been diagnosed. Only a few parents, therefore, decide to continue with a pregnancy after a prenatal diagnosis of trisomy 13, trisomy 18, or triploidy.

[…]

The aim of this study was to analyze the outcome of continued pregnancies after prenatal chromosomal diagnosis of trisomy 13, trisomy 18, or triploidy. These new data are aimed at improving the consulting process for parents who are confronted with prenatal diagnoses of these chromosomal abnormalities.

 

Birth History, Physical Characteristics, and Medical Conditions in Long-Term Survivors With Full Trisomy 13

Por Deborah Bruns
Department of Educational Psychology and Special Education, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Carbondale, Illinois
Received 7 April 2011; Accepted 29 July 2011

The purpose of the study is to provide data about long-term survivors with full trisomy 13 (t13). Mothers of 30 long-term survivors with full t13 completed an online survey. Survey data were downloaded into an SPSS database. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze survey data. Tracking Rare Incidence Syndrome (TRIS) Survey data on survival, birth information including maternal and paternal age at conception, physical characteristics, and medical conditions were compared. Data indicate longer mean survival rates (48.4 months for those living at the time of data collection, 40.8 months for those who died prior) than described in the literature. Means for gestations age, birth weight, and lengthare 38.11 weeks, 2,789.34 g and 48.45 cm, respectively. Long-term survivors presented with syndromerelated physical characteristics (e.g., low-set ears, cleft lip and palate) and medical conditions (e.g., ventricular septal defect (VSD), feeding difficulties). We conclude that data indicate longer survival and a range in birth information (gestational age, birth weight, and length) along with presence of common presenting physical characteristics and medical conditions of long-term survivors with full t13. (Leia mais / Keep reading it.)

Patau Syndrome: A Case Report

Aijaz Nanjiani, M.D.
Ashgar Hossain, M.D.
Bergen Regional Medical Center, Paramus, NJ
Nahla Mahgoub, M.D.
Beth Israel Medical Center,
New York, NY
 
SIR: Patau syndrome is a congenital disorder which was reported by Dr. Klaus Patau in 1960.1 The syndrome is caused by presence of an extra copy of chromosome 13. Other changes in chromosome 13, such as translocation, can also result in the characteristics classified as Patau syndrome. The syndrome causes serious physical and mental abnormalities, including neurological impairment, structural facial defects, heart defects, and mental retardation.
 
The incidence of Patau syndrome is approximately one per 12,000 live births.2–4 The median survival age for children with the syndrome is 2.5 days. The most common cause of death is cardiopulmonary complications. Forty-five percent of the patients die within the first month of life and 70% die by 1 year of age. Survival to adulthood is extremely rare.
 
Case Report
We would like to report a 51-year old Caucasian woman with Patau syndrome. Her chromosomal analysis showed partial translocation of chromosome 13 (unbalanced rearrangement between chromosome 13 and chromosome 14).
 
She had had 17 siblings in all. Eight of them died within the first few weeks of life. Another five died between the ages of 10 and 34 as a result of the medical complications of the syndrome; these siblings had mental retardation and psychosis. One living sibling, a 30-year-old man, suffered from mental retardation and psychosis. Three other siblings, two men and one woman, had no chromosomal abnormalities and are healthy.
 
The patient was born at full term with six toes on each foot, a small head, small eyes, low-set ears, and a cleft lip. Although all of her developmental milestones were delayed, she graduated from a special education high school. Her Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children at 4 years old showed an IQ of 61 and moderate mental retardation. Her Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) at 18 years old showed an IQ of 74 and educatable mental retardation while Rorschach testing showed severe immaturity. Her WAIS at 34 years old showed an IQ of 72 and borderline intellectual capabilities. The Halstead-Reitan Neurophysiological Battery showed serious neurological impairment. Her EEG showed complex partial seizures, and her computed tomography (CT) scan showed blunting of the frontal horns of the ventricular system.
 
Comment
What makes this case noteworthy, apart from the rarity of the syndrome and survival to adulthood, is the evolution of the psychosis, which is not a feature of Patau syndrome. The patient started to develop auditory hallucinations at the age of 15, for which she had multiple admissions and received different antipsychotic medications.
 
She started to decompensate after her antipsychotic medication was changed because of questionable seizures. She presented in the emergency room with agitated behavior. She was observed conversing with God, the devil, and her deceased siblings. She was delusional; she believed that people were taking her strength. The patient was medicated and admitted to the psychiatric floor. She was put on a regimen of valproic acid, 500 mg twice daily, aripiprazole, 20 mg daily, and olanzapine, 20 mg daily.
 
She was discharged to an assisted living facility after she stabilized. Since then, she has not had any hospitalization.
 
References
1. Patau K, Smith DW, Therman E, et al: Multiple congenital anomaly caused by an extra autosome. Lancet 1960; 1:790
2. Baty BJ, Brent L, Cary JC, et al: Natural history of trisomy 18 and trisomy 13, I: growth, physical assessment, medical histories, survival, and recurrence risk. Am J Med Genet 1994; 49:175–187
3. Baty BJ, Brent L, Cary JC, et al: Natural history of trisomy 18 and trisomy 13, II: psychomotor development. Am J Med Genet 1994; 49:189–194
4. Delatycki M, Garder R: Three cases of trisomy 13 mosaicism and a review of the literature. Clin Genet 1997; June:403–407

Research Letter Patau Syndrome With a Long Survival (146 Months): A Clinical Report and Review of Literature

American Journal of Medical Genetics 140A:92 – 93 (2006) 

Trisomy 13 is a clinically severe condition first described by Patau in 1960 [Smith et al., 1960]. The frequency of this syndrome is 1:3,000 live births [Tunca et al., 2001]. It is the third most frequent trisomy among live births [Phatak et al., 2004] after trisomy 21 (Down syndrome) and trisomy 18 (Edwards syndrome). Eighty-five percent of liveborns do not survive beyond 1 year of life, and most die before the age of 6 months [Duarte et al., 2004]. Trisomy 13 is characterized by multiple malformations of the cardiac, central nervous, and urogenital systems [Phatak et al., 2004]. There have only been five cases of patients with trisomy 13 previously reported, who had survived past the first decade [Redheendran et al., 1981; Singh, 1990; Zoll et al., 1993; Tunca et al., 2001]. In this report, we present a newborn with trisomy 13, the fourth longest described in the literature and the longest survival (146 months) reported in Greece. (Keep reading it…)