Buebel M S, Salinas C F, Pai G S, Macpherson R I, Greer M K, Perez-Comas A
Division of Genetics and Child Development, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston 29425, USA.
Am J Med Genet. 1996 Aug 23;64(3):447-52. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1096-8628(19960823)64:3<447::AID-AJMG1>3.0.CO;2-M.
Seckel syndrome is a rare, recessively inherited disorder of severe growth retardation and distinct craniofacial, orodental, and skeletal anomalies. Even though there are well-established minimum diagnostic criteria for this syndrome, controversy exists about its boundaries and criteria for exclusion. We studied 2 remarkably similar, unrelated children with most of the clinical and radiographic manifestations of Seckel's original patient. Although their craniofacial and orodental anomalies are typical of Seckel syndrome, 1 child has unusual appearance of the hands and feet that have not been previously associated with it. This patient appears to define a new Seckel-like syndrome and suggests heterogeneity in this type of primordial dwarfism.