Friday, September 15, 2017

- Edwards syndrome and Patau syndrome

 

Trsiomy 18 and Trisomy 13

Trisomy 13

(Patau syndrome)

Trisomy 18

(Edwards syndrome)


1/ 14000 ( female = male)

1/8000 ( female > male)

incidence

Severe MR

neurological

Hypo or hypertonia

Holoprosencephaly (single hemisphere with single ventricle)

Hypertonia

Microcephaly

head

Sloping forehead

Scalp defects

Prominent occiput

Micrognathia, dysplastic Low set ears

face

Midline Cleft lip and palate

 

Eye anomalies (cataract, coloboma, micropthalmia (small eye) and corneal opacities)

Closely-spaced eyes, single central eye (cyclopia)

Small palpebral fissure

 

polydactaly

Clenched fist

Rocker bottom

clinodactyly,

 overlapping fingers (second and fifth overlap third and fourth)

extremities

Cardiac (88%),: VSD or PPA

Cardiac (99%):  vsd , pda

Associated malformations

renal

Pre & post-natal growth retardation

growth

Some 50% of babies die in the first month and most of the rest in the first year.

Survival beyond early infancy is rare and associated with profound learning disability.

Only 5% lives > 1year and associated with profound learning disability.

Most babies die in the first year of life.

Life expectancy

confirmed by chromosome analysis.

Many affected fetuses are detected by ultrasound scan during the second trimester of pregnancy and diagnosis can be confirmed antenatally by amniocentesis and chromosome analysis. 

Can also be diagnosed on non-invasive prenatal testing (NIPT).

diagnosis

Recurrence risk is low, except when the trisomy is due to a balanced chromosome rearrangement in one of the parents.

Recurrence risk

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