Luke S, Verma R S, PeBenito R, Macera M J
Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn, New York 11201.
Am J Med Genet. 1991 Jul 1;40(1):57-60. doi: 10.1002/ajmg.1320400111.
Structural abnormalities involving heterochromatic regions of the human genome are difficult to characterize because these segments are G-band negative by GTG technique, a routinely used procedure in clinical cytogenetic laboratories. Chromosome abnormalities of such cases have gone undetected or were incorrectly characterized because these regions are so-called heteromorphisms or variants. Consequently, much anxiety has been aroused by the confusion between a chromosome abnormality and a normal heteromorphic variant. We report the first documented case with a so-called highly unusual h region of chromosome 9 which is not a variation but a structural rearrangement involving a paracentric inversion and a duplication. The major clinical features were psychomotor retardation, microcephaly, narrow palpebral fissures, renal and genital anomalies, vertebral anomalies, protruding tongue, and learning and behavioral problems. A concise review of variable duplicated segments of 9q is also provided.