TY - JOUR
T1 - X-Linked Lissencephaly With Absent Corpus Callosum and Abnormal Genitalia
T2 - An Evolving Multisystem Syndrome With Severe Congenital Intestinal Diarrhea Disease
AU - Coman, David
AU - Fullston, Tom
AU - Shoubridge, Cheryl
AU - Leventer, Richard
AU - Wong, Flora
AU - Nazaretian, Simon
AU - Simpson, Ian
AU - Gecz, Josef
AU - McGillivray, George
PY - 2017/11/21
Y1 - 2017/11/21
N2 - X-linked lissencephaly with abnormal genitalia is a rare and devastating syndrome. The authors present an infant with a multisystem phenotype where the intestinal manifestations were as life limiting as the central nervous system features. Severe chronic diarrhea resulted in failure to thrive, dehydration, electrolyte derangements, long-term hospitalization, and prompted transition to palliative care. Other multisystem manifestations included megacolon, colitis, pancreatic insufficiency hypothalamic dysfunction, hypothyroidism, and hypophosphatasia. A novel aristaless-related homeobox gene mutation, c.1136G>T/p.R379L, was identified. This case contributes to the clinical, histological, and molecular understanding of the multisystem nature of this disorder, especially the role of ARX in the development of the enteroendocrine system.
AB - X-linked lissencephaly with abnormal genitalia is a rare and devastating syndrome. The authors present an infant with a multisystem phenotype where the intestinal manifestations were as life limiting as the central nervous system features. Severe chronic diarrhea resulted in failure to thrive, dehydration, electrolyte derangements, long-term hospitalization, and prompted transition to palliative care. Other multisystem manifestations included megacolon, colitis, pancreatic insufficiency hypothalamic dysfunction, hypothyroidism, and hypophosphatasia. A novel aristaless-related homeobox gene mutation, c.1136G>T/p.R379L, was identified. This case contributes to the clinical, histological, and molecular understanding of the multisystem nature of this disorder, especially the role of ARX in the development of the enteroendocrine system.
KW - Journal Article
U2 - 10.1177/2329048X17738625
DO - 10.1177/2329048X17738625
M3 - Article
C2 - 29152528
SN - 2329-048X
VL - 4
SP - 2329048X17738625
JO - Child neurology open
JF - Child neurology open
ER -