Schinzel A, Schmid W, Fraccaro M, Tiepolo L, Zuffardi O, Opitz J M, Lindsten J, Zetterqvist P, Enell H, Baccichetti C, Tenconi R, Pagon R A
Hum Genet. 1981;57(2):148-58. doi: 10.1007/BF00282012.
Eleven patients with the so-called Cat Eye syndrome are reported including a more detailed description of the original cases reported by Schmid and Fraccaro. All cases had, in addition to a normal karyotype, a small extra G-like chromosome which appeared to be an isochromosome for the juxtacentromeric region (pter to q11) of an acrocentric chromosome. None were mosaics. Clinical findings and further cytogenetic studies in a few cases suggest that these markers probably derive from a No. 22 chromosome. Characteristic features of the Cat Eye syndrome in these 11 patients and those reviewed from the literature are: ocular coloboma which may involve the iris, choroid and/or optic nerve, preauricular skin tags and/or pits which are probably the most consistent feature, congenital heart defect, anal atresia with a fistula, renal malformations such as unilateral absence, unilateral or bilateral hypoplasia, and cystic dysplasia, and antimongoloid position of eyes. Intelligence is usually low-normal, although moderate retardation is also seen. There is great variability in the clinical findings ranging from near normal to lethal malformations. Less frequent, but also characteristic findings are: microphthalmia, microtia with atresia of the external auditory canal, intrahepatic or extrahepatic biliary atresia and malrotation of the gut. Direct transmission of the marker from one generation to the other was observed in both sexes. In those families, there was considerable variability in the clinical findings between affected family members. These cases show that there is a bias of ascertainment for patients who have the more striking malformations, especially those with ocular coloboma and anal atresia, a combination which appears to be present in only a minority of cases. Many mildly affected patients probably remain undetected. It is proposed that the term Cat Eye syndrome should be applied only to cases with trisomy or tetrasomy of not more than 22pter to q11 and without additional duplication or deletion of another autosomal segment.
本文报告了11例所谓的猫眼综合征患者,其中包括对Schmid和Fraccaro最初报道病例的更详细描述。所有病例除核型正常外,均有一条额外的小G组样染色体,该染色体似乎是一条近端着丝粒染色体近着丝粒区域(pter至q11)的等臂染色体。无一例为嵌合体。少数病例的临床发现和进一步的细胞遗传学研究表明,这些标记物可能源自22号染色体。这11例患者以及文献中回顾的患者的猫眼综合征特征如下:眼部缺损,可累及虹膜、脉络膜和/或视神经;耳前皮肤赘生物和/或凹痕,这可能是最一致的特征;先天性心脏缺陷;伴有瘘管的肛门闭锁;肾脏畸形,如单侧缺如、单侧或双侧发育不全以及囊性发育异常;以及眼的反蒙古样位置。智力通常略低于正常水平,不过也可见中度发育迟缓。临床发现差异很大,从接近正常到致命畸形不等。较少见但也具有特征性的发现包括:小眼症、外耳道闭锁的小耳畸形、肝内或肝外胆道闭锁以及肠道旋转不良。在两个性别中均观察到标记物从一代直接传递至另一代。在这些家族中,受影响家庭成员之间的临床发现差异很大。这些病例表明,对于有更明显畸形的患者存在确诊偏倚,尤其是那些有眼部缺损和肛门闭锁的患者,这种组合仅在少数病例中出现。许多轻度受影响的患者可能未被发现。建议“猫眼综合征”这一术语仅应用于不超过22pter至q11三体或四体且无另一条常染色体片段额外重复或缺失的病例。