scholarly journals Fetal Fractures in an Infant with Maternal Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, CCDC134 Pathogenic Mutation and a Negative Genetic Test for Osteogenesis Imperfecta

Children ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 512
Author(s):  
Michael F. Holick ◽  
Arash Shirvani ◽  
Nipith Charoenngam

Intrauterine fractures are a rare clinical finding caused by abnormal early-life osteogenesis. In this case report, we reported a male infant with twenty-three intrauterine/fetal fractures resembling osteogenesis imperfecta and tested negative for COL1A1 and COL1A2 mutations. The infant’s mother had Ehlers–Danlos syndrome, hypermobility type. Whole-genome sequencing revealed that there were no pathologic mutations previously documented to be associated with intrauterine fracture. Genetic mutations reported to be associated with fragility fractures were identified. These include the pathogenic homozygous mutation in the CCDC134 gene. Other genetic variants that might be responsible for variable expressivity of the skeletal manifestation include the homozygous variants of the genes CCDC134, COL15A1 and ZFPM1, and the heterozygous variants of the genes MYH3, BCHE, AUTS2. This is the first reported case of in utero fractures, that was confirmed by X-ray after birth, in an infant who had no genetic evidence for osteogenesis imperfecta, had a homozygous pathogenic mutation of an osteogenesis gene and whose mother had Ehlers-Danlos syndrome hypermobility type. Therefore, we have identified a new genetic cause for in utero fractures. If after birth, this infant were found to have these fractures in various stages of healing with a negative genetic test for osteogenesis imperfecta he would have been misdiagnosed as due to nonaccidental trauma.

2014 ◽  
Vol 29 (6) ◽  
pp. 1412-1423 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frieda Chen ◽  
Ruolin Guo ◽  
Shousaku Itoh ◽  
Luisa Moreno ◽  
Esther Rosenthal ◽  
...  

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1957 ◽  
Vol 19 (6) ◽  
pp. 1160-1161
Author(s):  
JAMES V. NEEL

The contents of this book first appeared as a series of papers in the Journal of Chronic Diseases from November, 1955, through May, 1956. These papers, with additions, have now been collected into a volume which is an excellent summary of the heritable disorders of connective tissue. After brief introductory chapters dealing with some general characteristics of hereditary syndromes, and with the biology of normal connective tissue, the author devotes successive chapters to the Marfan syndrome, the Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, osteogenesis imperfecta, pseudoxanthoma elasticum, and the Hurler syndrome.


Author(s):  
Gavin Clunie ◽  
Nick Wilkinson ◽  
Elena Nikiphorou ◽  
Deepak R. Jadon

The Oxford Handbook of Rheumatology, 4th edition, includes a chapter on the hereditary diseases of connective tissue. Of importance, up-to-date genetic information and classification of subtypes of osteogenesis imperfecta is reviewed. There is a summary of a broad range of diseases of connective tissue including Marfan syndrome, Stickler disease, and arthrogryposis—conditions encountered occasionally by the rheumatologist. The chapter details the new 2017 criteria for Ehlers–Danlos syndrome and outlines the new classification for the hypermobility spectrum disorders and the distinction between generalized, localized, and regional hypermobility and hypermobility Ehlers–Danlos syndrome, both in adults and in children.


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