Medicine:Crane-Heise syndrome

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The Crane-Heise syndrome is a very rare and lethal birth defect without a known cause. It was first described in a 1981 publication, and its main signs are facial malformations, lack of bone mineralization, and musculoskeletal anomalies.[1]

Symptoms

According to a 2011 publication that summarizes the nine known cases, the leading symptoms are:

Aetiology and differential diagnosis

The clustering of the cases suggests an autosomal recessive disorder (see genetical dominance). In the aminopterin-syndrome sine aminopterin syndrome (ASSAS), a poorly mineralized calvarium is present, too, but many other tell-tale symptoms of Crane-Heise are lacking. A similar disease is cleidocranial dysplasia, but this is an autosomal dominant disease caused by mutations in the RUNX2 gene – and such mutations have not been found in Crane-Heise cases. Chromosomal abnormalities are also absent in the Crane-Heise syndrome.[2]

Diagnosis

As the cause is still unknown, the only diagnostic is ultrasound, which can detect a lack of skull mineralization by the 10th week of pregnancy.[2]

References

  1. Crane, James; Heise, Robin (1981-08-01). "New syndrome in three affected siblings". Pediatrics. PMID 7267231. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Petit, Florence; Devisme, Louise (2011). "Crane-Heise syndrome: Two further case reports". European Journal of Medical Genetics. doi:10.1016/j.ejmg.2010.11.004. 
Classification