strabismus

Duane Retraction Syndrome 2

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

Duane retraction syndrome is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous condition with a highly variable phenotype.  It is a congenital and non-progressive strabismus syndrome.  Most cases occur sporadically but others are familial and about 30% of affected individuals have other congenital anomalies.  It is also seen as part of other syndromes such as Goldenhar (164210), and Wildervanck (314600).  In the absence of other anomalies, it is called isolated Duane syndrome.  Three heritable types with autosomal dominant familial patterns have also been defined.  Patients with type 2 discussed here are more likely to have an exotropia with a head turn toward the uninvolved side when only one eye is involved compared with Duane syndrome type 1 (126800) in which an esotropia with a head turn to the involved side is more common.  However, the clinical features are highly variable although intrafamilial differences may be less than those between families.

Sporadic cases are mostly unilateral while familial ones are more likely to be bilateral.  The essential features are globe retraction upon adduction with narrowing of the lid fissure and some limitation of abduction. Vertical deviation during adduction is sometimes seen.  Frank strabismus in primary position is evident in as many as 76% of individuals and a compensatory head turn is often adopted. Still, amblyopia occurs in at least 10% of individuals.  Females are affected more frequently than males.

At one point the syndrome was considered to be a myopathic disorder based on histologic changes in the lateral rectus but current thought based on MRI and neurohistologic studies favors a neuropathic etiology.  The abducens motor neurons and the sixth nerve may be absent or dysplastic.  Branches of the third nerve may also co-innervate the lateral and medial rectus muscles.  EMG studies have documented simultaneous activation of the two muscles which likely accounts for at least some of the globe retraction.  However, hypoplastic muscles, including the superior oblique, superior rectus, and levator, have also been visualized on MRI.

Systemic Features: 

A variety of skeletal and uroglogic anomalies have been found in association with the ocular findings of Duane syndrome but no consistent pattern has been documented.

Genetics

Familial isolated Duane syndrome 2 individuals usually appear in an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance caused by a mutation in CHN1 (2q31-q32.1).  The protein products appear to be involved in early neurological development and are critical to the formation of the cranial nerves that innervate the extraocular muscles.

Mutations in CHN1 are usually absent in nonfamilial cases of Duane syndrome.

For other forms of autosomal dominant Duane syndrome, see Duane Retraction Syndrome 1 (126800) and Duane Retraction Syndrome 3 (617041).

Pedigrees consistent with presumed autosomal recessive inheritance have also been reported but the responsible genes are unknown.

Features of Duane syndrome are also part of the Duane-Radial Ray Syndrome (607323).

Pedigree: 
Autosomal dominant
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

Various treatments can be useful, ranging from prisms for mild cases to muscle surgery for a severe head turn or vertical deviations.  Patients should be followed carefully in the first decade of life for the onset of amblyopia and appropriate treatment instituted.  Because of the variability in signs, each patient requires individualized treatment.

References
Article Title: 

Incontinentia Pigmenti

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

This is primarily a disorder of skin, teeth, hair, and the central nervous system but 35% of patients have important ocular features.  The iris is variably atrophic and has pigmentary anomalies often with posterior synechiae.  Nystagmus, strabismus, and limited vision are often present.  The majority (up to 90%) of individuals have significant retinal disease.  The retinal vascular pattern is anomalous with tortuosity in some areas and absence of vessels in others.  Preretinal fibrosis and retinal detachments may suggest the presence of a retinoblastoma.  Cataracts are common in patients who have a retinal detachment and some patients have microphthalmia. The retinal pigment epithelium is often abnormal with various-sized patches of sharply demarcated depigmentation.  Cases with uveitis, papillitis and chorioretinitis have been observed and it has been suggested that the observed retinal and choroidal changes result from prior inflammatory disease, perhaps even occurring in utero. There is a great deal of asymmetry in the clinical findings in the two eyes.

Systemic Features: 

Skin changes consisting of erythematous eruptions in a linear pattern are often present at birth and this may be followed by a verrucous stage.  The acute, early findings of inflammatory disease eventually subside, ultimately resulting in pigmentary changes that appear in a 'marbled pattern' in young adults.  Hypodontia and anodontia may be present.  Alopecia and CNS abnormalities are found in nearly half of patients.  Skeletal and structural deformities are common in patients with severe neurological deficits.  The only sign of this disorder in adult women may be a whorled pattern of scarring alopecia.

As many as 30% of patients have neurological features which may be present in the neonatal period.  Seizures of various types occur in 30% of patients.  MRI findings include periventricular and subcortical white matter changes, as well as corpus callosum hypoplasia, cerebral atrophy, and cerebellar hypoplasia.

 

Genetics

The majority of evidence suggests that this is an X-linked dominant disorder with lethality in males although sporadic cases occur.  The mutation occurs as a genomic rearrangement of the IKK-gamma gene, also known as NEMO (IKBKG) located at Xq28.  There is evidence from skin cultures that cells with the mutant X chromosome inactivated are preferentially viable.  It has been proposed that cells with the mutant bearing X chromosome as the active one are gradually replaced by those in which the normal X chromosome is active accounting for the post-natal course of the skin disease.

Pedigree: 
X-linked dominant, mother affected
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

No treatment for the generalized disorder is available although ocular surgery might be beneficial in rare cases with cataracts and detachments.

References
Article Title: 

Pfeiffer Syndrome

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

Patients may have extreme proptosis (95%) secondary to shallow orbits and exposure keratitis (41%) is a risk.  Hypertelorism, strabismus, and antimongoloid lid slants are common.  More rare signs include anterior chamber anomalies and optic nerve hypoplasia.

Systemic Features: 

Pfeiffer syndrome has been divided into 3 types, of which cases with types 2 and 3 often die young.  Type 1 has the more typical features with midface hypoplasia, broad thumbs and toes, craniosynostosis, and often some degree of syndactyly.  Adult patients with type 1 may be only mildly affected with some degree of midface hypoplasia and minor broadening of the first digits.  Hearing loss secondary to bony defects is relatively common.  Cleft palate is uncommon.  Airway malformations especially in the trachea can cause respiratory problems.

Genetics

This is a genetically heterogeneous disorder resulting from mutations in at least 2 genes, FGFR1 (8p11.2-p11.1) and FGFR2 (10q26).  The less common cases with the latter mutation are allelic to Apert (101200), Crouzon (123500), and Jackson-Weiss (123150) syndromes.  Inheritance is autosomal dominant but some cases are only mildly affected.  New mutations exhibit a paternal age effect.

Other forms of craniosynostosis in which mutations in FGFR2 have been found are: Beare-Stevenson Syndrome (123790), and Saethre-Chotzen Syndrome (101400).

Pedigree: 
Autosomal dominant
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

Exposure keratitis requires the usual treatment.  Fronto-orbital advancement surgery for the midface underdevelopment is generally helpful for the complications of proptosis.  Airway obstruction may require tracheostomy or surgical correction of the air passages.

References
Article Title: 

FGFR2 mutations in Pfeiffer syndrome

Lajeunie E, Ma HW, Bonaventure J, Munnich A, Le Merrer M, Renier D. FGFR2 mutations in Pfeiffer syndrome. Nat Genet. 1995 Feb;9(2):108.

PubMed ID: 
7719333

Crouzon Syndrome

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

The primary ocular features result from pattern-specific, premature synostoses of cranial sutures.  The orbits are often shallow resulting in proptosis, sometimes to such an extent that exposure keratitis or even spontaneous subluxation of the globe results.  This is exacerbated by the midface hypoplasia that is often present.  As many as 22% of patients have optic atrophy, most likely secondary to chronic papilledema from elevated intracranial pressure.  Strabismus is common, often with a V-pattern exotropia.  Overaction of the inferior obliques and underaction of the superior obliques have been described.  One patient with narrow angle glaucoma has been reported.

Systemic Features: 

The coronal sutures are the most commonly affected by the premature synostosis and hence the skull is often brachycephalic and the forehead is prominent.  Increased intracranial pressure is a risk.  The nose is parrot-beaked and the upper lip is short.  Maxillary hypoplasia from the midface underdevelopment can cause crowding and displacement of the upper teeth.

Genetics

This type of craniosynostosis is caused by mutations in the fibroblast growth factor receptor-2 gene, FGFR2, located at 10q26.  It is generally considered an autosomal dominant disorder based on familial cases but most occur sporadically.  A paternal age effect on mutations has been found. 

The same gene is mutant in other craniosynostosis disorders sometimes clinically separated such as Pfeiffer Syndrome (101600), Jackson-Weiss syndrome (123150), Beare-Stevenson Syndrome (123790), Apert Syndrome (101200), and Saethre-Chotzen Syndrome (101400).  However, this entire group has many overlapping features making classification on clinical grounds alone difficult.  Only Apert syndrome (101200) is caused by a unique mutation whereas other syndromes seem to owe their existence to multiple mutations.

Pedigree: 
Autosomal dominant
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

Exposure keratitis must be treated.  Cranial surgery has been necessary for some patients to relieve the papilledema but the post operative outcome can be complicated by hydrocephalus.

References
Article Title: 

Glaucoma with Crouzon Syndrome

Alshamrani AA, Al-Shahwan S. Glaucoma with Crouzon Syndrome. J Glaucoma. 2018
Mar 19. doi: 10.1097/IJG.0000000000000946. [Epub ahead of print].

PubMed ID: 
29557836

Albinism, Ocular Type 1

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

Signs in ocular albinism include hypopigmentation of the fundus with clearly visible choroidal vessels, foveal hypoplasia, and hypopigmentation of the iris. Strabismus, nystagmus, photophobia, absent stereoacuity and high refractive errors including hypermetropia are other common features.  Vision may be near normal but usually worse, in the range of 20/100 to 20/300.  In at least some patients with ocular albinism, concentric macular rings have been identified using infrared reflectance images.

In ocular albinism there is a nearly complete crossing of nerve fibers in the optic chiasm as well as a decreased number of photoreceptors.  MRI imaging of the optic chiasm in humans with albinism reveals it to be smaller with a wider angle between optic tracts, reflecting the atypical crossing of nerve fibers.

This is an X-linked recessive disorder and affects mainly men. In 80% of female carriers a mosaic of pigmentary changes can be observed in the fundus, especially in the periphery as a result of lyonization.  A few female heterozygotes have ocular changes of albinism including nystagmus and reduced visual acuity, likely as a result of unequal X-chromosome inactivation.  Perhaps three-quarters of carrier females have transillumination defects in the iris.

Hearing loss is often associated with pigmentation disorders and families with X-linked ocular albinism have been reported with a late onset sensorineural deafness (300650).  The ocular findings are typical but deafness is not significant until late midlife.

Systemic Features: 

In ocular albinism, pigmentation is normal except in the eye.  Hearing loss has been reported in a single family but this may be a unique disorder since the genotype was not determined.

Male infertility has been reported in some patients with OCA1 and late-onset sensorineural hearing loss which has been hypothesized ro be part of a contiguous gene deletion syndrome involving GPR143, TBL1X and posssibly SHROOM2 genes.

Genetics

Ocular albinism (OA1) is a recessive X-linked disorder, caused by mutations in the GPR143 gene, located at Xp22.3.  The protein product, a G protein-coupled receptor, is localized on the membrane of melanosomes in pigmented cells in the eye.  The same gene is mutated in congenital nystagmus 6 (300814).  Ocular albinism with late onset sensorineural deafness (300650) results from mutations in the Xp22.3 region as well and may or may not be the same condition.  In some individuals the contiguous genes TBL1X and SHROOM2 may also have mutations (usually microdeletions).

It has been reported that mutations in GNA13 (17q24.1), activated by OA1, can also result in the ocular albinism phenotype.

Pedigree: 
X-linked recessive, carrier mother
X-linked recessive, father affected
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

Treatment for the ocular symptoms is targeted toward specific problems. Refractive errors are treated with corrective glasses with tinted lenses recommended for the photophobia. Low vision aids and special education may be required.

References
Article Title: 

Retinoblastoma

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular malignancy of childhood occurring in 1 in 18,000 to 1 in 30,000 live births worldwide. The majority of cases are diagnosed before the age of 3 years. The most common clinical feature at time of diagnosis is leukocoria (white pupillary reflex) followed by strabismus. Other presenting features include intraocular inflammation, spontaneous hyphema, hypopyon, heterochromia, proptosis, spontaneous globe perforation, retinal detachment, cataract, neovascularization of iris, glaucoma, nystagmus, tearing and anisocoria.

Retinoblastoma can usually be observed during fundus exam as a white subretinal or vitreous mass, occasionally with multifocal nodules, typically with calcification of the surface. The growth of the tumor can be endophytic, exophytic or diffuse. Endophytic growth of retinoblastoma occurs when the tumor penetrates the inner limiting membrane of the retina and can result in vitreous seeding and growth and can simulate iridocyclitis or endophthalmitis.  Exophytic growth occurs when the tumor grows into the subretinal space, which results in accumulation of subretinal fluid and retinal detachments. If the tumor infiltrates Bruchs membrane, there is an increased risk of invasion of choroidal vessels or ciliary nerves and vessels. Diffuse growth is rare and characterized by slow infiltration of retina with diffuse thickening.

Imaging studies such as ultrasound, computerized tomography, and MRI can show the extent of tumor and the presence of calcification.

Systemic Features: 

In heritable cases there is an increased risk of developing other malignant neoplasms throughout life such as osteosarcomas, cutaneous melanomas, pinealomas, and thyroid carcinomas. The risk for secondary malignancies is higher in areas treated with radiation, where osteogenic sarcoma, fibrosarcoma and soft tissue sarcomas may occur. Patients should be closely monitored for secondary tumors throughout life.

Genetics

Retinoblastoma is a malignant tumor of the developing retinal cells caused in most cases by mutations in both copies of the RB1 gene.  The RB1 gene is a tumor suppressor gene, located on chromosome 13q14 and is the first human cancer gene to be cloned. The gene codes for the tumor suppressor protein pRB, which by binding to the transcription factor E2F, inhibits the cell from entering the S-phase during mitosis.  Recent evidence suggests that post-mitotic cone precursors are uniquely sensitive to pRB depletion and may be the cells in which retinoblastoma originates.

However, more recent information suggests that the occurrence and viability of retinoblastic cells may be more complex than suggested by simple loss of function of the RB1 alleles.  There is increasing evidence for the role of epigenetic factors such as DNA methylation impacting the differential expression of more than 100 additional genes which may be influencing the retinoblastoma phenotype.  Among these is an upregulation of spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK) required for tumor cell survival which, if inhibited, leads to retinoblastoma cell death in vivo and in vitro.

Pedigrees of familial cases have an autosomal dominant pattern but the disease requires homozygosity of the RB1 mutation.  This complicates genetic counseling for retinoblastoma. One third of cases have a germline mutation with a mutation in only one of the two gene copies in every cell.  A somatic mutation in the second allele then leads to  homozygosity causing tumor development.  Since one of the parents contributed the germinal mutation, and there is high penetrance (as much as 85%), this leads to the autosomal dominant pattern in these families. In 6% of retinoblastoma cases with germline mutations the family history is positive. The risk for developing bilateral and multifocal retinoblastoma is high and the age of onset is around 14 months.  This is the case for virtually all bilateral tumors.  The mean number of tumors is about 5 in the two eyes.  The offspring of a parent with bilateral retinoblastoma have a 45% chance of developing a tumor (they have a 50% chance of inheriting the germline mutant allele).  Reduced penetrance of 10 to 15% lowers the expected occurrence of disease from 50% to 45%.

However, two thirds of cases are of non-germinal origin with both somatic mutations occurring in a single retinal progenitor cell.  Because this is a highly unlikely event, these cases are generally unilateral and unifocal with an average age of onset of 24 months. Sporadic cases constitute about 94% of all retinoblastomas, of which about 60% have unilateral disease with no germline mutations.  Individuals who acquire mutations in both alleles somatically (with single, unilateral tumors) do not have a mutation in their germ cells and therefore usually transfer no tumor risk to their offspring.  Laterality and number of tumors alone, however, cannot be used for accurate predictions in this case since about 15% of patients with unilateral and monofocal tumors actually have germline mutations.  This leaves a residual risk of transferring heritability of about 1-5% in unilateral patients without a family history.

To further complicate the story, recent evidence suggests that retinoblastoma is genetically heterogeneous.  About 6% of patients have no RB1 mutation.  In one study, about half of such individuals have up-regulation of the MYCN oncogene (2p24.3) suggesting a second mechanism leading to clinical retinoblastoma.  For unknown reasons, such tumors tend to  be larger, more aggressive, and discovered at an earlier age than unilateral non-familial RB1 tumors.  The MYCN gene product is a transcription factor important for organ development during embryogenesis.  Its amplification has been implicated in about 25% of neuroblastomas.

Pedigree: 
Autosomal dominant
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

Enucleation may be necessary to eliminate the primary tumor, especially large ones, but other treatments can be used successfully to treat smaller tumors and spare vision. Intravenous chemotherapy is the most common treatment, which can be combined with subtenon chemotherapy, cryotherapy, thermotherapy, and plaque brachytherapy. External beam radiation can be used for refractive cases and recurrences. Another treatment alternative is localized ophthalmic artery intra-arterial chemotherapy.

It is necessary to follow all offspring of parents with bilateral tumors throughout the first decade because of the risk for new tumor development, as late as 5 to 7 years of age.   There are even a few case reports of retinoblastoma diagnosed in adults. However, since the retinal cells are generally mature by the age of 2.5 years, such events are very rare.  All parents of children with retinoblastoma should have complete fundus evaluations since rare tumors spontaneously regress leaving retinal scars, which in such a family pattern suggests that a germline mutation was inherited.

Survivors of hereditary retinoblastomas must be followed the rest of their lives, and especially so if radiation treatment was applied, because of the high risk of developing secondary neoplasms.  The risk rises with age.

References
Article Title: 

Characterisation of retinoblastomas without RB1 mutations: genomic, gene expression, and clinical studies

Rushlow DE, Mol BM, Kennett JY, Yee S, Pajovic S, Th?(c)riault BL, Prigoda-Lee NL, Spencer C, Dimaras H, Corson TW, Pang R, Massey C, Godbout R, Jiang Z, Zacksenhaus E, Paton K, Moll AC, Houdayer C, Raizis A, Halliday W, Lam WL, Boutros PC, Lohmann D, Dorsman JC, Gallie BL. Characterisation of retinoblastomas without RB1 mutations: genomic, gene expression, and clinical studies. Lancet Oncol. 2013 Mar 12:327-34.

PubMed ID: 
23498719

A novel retinoblastoma therapy from genomic and epigenetic analyses

Zhang J, Benavente CA, McEvoy J, Flores-Otero J, Ding L, Chen X, Ulyanov A, Wu G, Wilson M, Wang J, Brennan R, Rusch M, Manning AL, Ma J, Easton J, Shurtleff S, Mullighan C, Pounds S, Mukatira S, Gupta P, Neale G, Zhao D, Lu C, Fulton RS, Fulton LL, Hong X, Dooling DJ, Ochoa K, Naeve C, Dyson NJ, Mardis ER, Bahrami A, Ellison D, Wilson RK, Downing JR, Dyer MA. A novel retinoblastoma therapy from genomic and epigenetic analyses. Nature. 2012 Jan 11;481(7381):329-34.

PubMed ID: 
22237022

Corneal Dystrophy, Congenital Stromal

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

This rare congenital form of stromal dystrophy is sometimes considered a disorder of collagen fibrils with abnormally small diameters.  These may appear disorganized in areas.  Corneal opacities are often evident at birth or during the neonatal period.  Numerous small spots of fluffy, flaky deposits are found throughout the stroma creating a diffuse cloudy appearance and these may become more numerous with age indicating some progression.  The epithelium, Descemet membrane and the endothelium are not affected and the stroma is of normal or slightly increased thickness.  In some areas abnormal fibrillar layers are seen.  Although corneal erosions and photophobia are usually not clinically significant, acuity may be as low as hand motions and penetrating keratoplasty may be indicated.  In one series this was necessary at an average age of 20 years.  In the same series of 11 patients, 4 had strabismus, 3 eyes developed open angle glaucoma and band keratopathy was present in one patient.  Nystagmus has not been reported.

Deposition of abnormal decorin contributes to the stromal opacities. 

Systemic Features: 

No systemic abnormalities have been reported.

Genetics

This is a rare autosomal dominant stromal dystrophy that results from a mutation in the DCN gene on chromosome 12 (12q21.3).  Several frameshift mutations have been reported    in the decorin (DCN) gene causing premature truncation of the protein product.

Pedigree: 
Autosomal dominant
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

Penetrating keratoplasty can be successful in restoring vision.  Grafts have been reported to remain clear for up to 36 years in more than half of the patients in one series but opacities recurred in others.

References
Article Title: 

Macular Dystrophy, Vitelliform 2

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

Best disease primarily affects the macular and paramacular areas.  The classical lesion resembles an egg yolk centered on the fovea.  Most patients, however, never exhibit the typical vitelliform lesion and may instead have normal maculae, or irregular yellowish deposits that may even be extrafoveal.  Histologically the RPE contains increased amounts of lipofuscin.  The ‘egg yolk’ is located beneath the neurosensory retina and the overlying retinal circulation often remains intact.  It can evolve into a ‘scrambled egg’ appearance and an apparent fluid level may be evident.  Some patients exhibit only RPE changes including hyper-  or hypopigmentation throughout the macula.  Choroidal neovasculariztion with hemorrhage leading to scarring and gliosis are uncommon but present a serious risk to vision.  The common end point for symptomatic patients is some degree of photoreceptor damage.

Until recently, most reports of Best macular dystrophy did not include genotypic data.  It is therefore difficult to classify families with variants of the disease, such as adult-onset or atypical vitelliform dystrophy but these at least suggest that this may be a heterogeneous disorder.  At the present time, the diagnosis should be reserved for those with an abnormal light-to-dark (Arden) ratio on electro-oculography and a mutation in the BEST1 gene. 

Visual function varies widely and has considerable fluctuation.   As many as 7-9 percent of patients are asymptomatic throughout life and few have vision loss to 20/200.  Many individuals maintain vision of 20/40 or better throughout life.  Some experience episodic acute vision loss to 20/80 or worse but often recover to at least 20/30.  It has been reported that as many as 76 per cent under the age of 40 retain 20/40 and 30 per cent retain this level of vision into the 5th and 6th decade of life.

Other ocular manifestations include hyperopia, esotropia, and, rarely, shallow anterior chambers with angle closure glaucoma.

Systemic Features: 

None have been reported.

Genetics

A mutation in the bestrophin gene (BEST1) located on chromosome 11 (11q13) is responsible for the disease in most patients.  Best disease is usually transmitted in an autosomal dominant pattern from parent to offspring.  A large number of mutations have been found in the BEST1 gene but so far no correlation with severity of disease is possible.  In fact, there is a great deal of clinical variation within families having identical mutations resembling that of the variation found among different mutations.

Several families have also been reported with autosomal recessive inheritance.  Affected offspring had homozygous mutations in the bestrophin gene with reduced light/dark responses and vision loss.  Some have atypical vitelliform retinal and sometimes multifocal lesions.  They may develop angle closure glaucoma.  Their heterozygous parents  have either normal or abnormal EOGs and no visible fundus disease.  So far no families with presumed recessive inheritance of Best macular dystrophy have demonstrated parent-to-child transmission of typical vitelliform lesions.

Genotyping has identified at least 5 forms of vitelliform macular dystrophy.  In addition to the iconic Best disease described here we know of at least four more variants and specific mutations have been identified in three.  No mutation or locus has yet been identified in VMD1 (153840) but it is likely a unique condition since mutations in other genes known to cause vitelliform dystrophy have been ruled out.  Other forms are VMD3 (608161) due to mutations in the PRPH2 gene, VMD4 (616151) resulting from mutations in the IMPG1 gene, and VMD5 (616152) caused by mutations in the IMPG2 gene.

Autosomal dominant vitreoretinochoroidopathy (193220) is an allelic disorder.

Pedigree: 
Autosomal dominant
Autosomal recessive
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

None known for disease.  Subretinal neovascularization may benefit from ablation treatments.

References
Article Title: 

Mutations in IMPG1 Cause Vitelliform Macular Dystrophies. Am

Manes G, Meunier I, Avila-Fern?degndez A, Banfi S, Le Meur G, Zanlonghi X, Corton M, Simonelli F, Brabet P, Labesse G, Audo I, Mohand-Said S, Zeitz C, Sahel JA, Weber M, Dollfus H, Dhaenens CM, Allorge D, De Baere E, Koenekoop RK, Kohl S, Cremers FP, Hollyfield JG, S?(c)n?(c)chal A, Hebrard M, Bocquet B, Garc??a CA, Hamel CP. Mutations in IMPG1 Cause Vitelliform Macular Dystrophies. Am J Hum Genet. 2013 Aug 29. [Epub ahead of print] PubMed PMID: 23993198.

PubMed ID: 
23993198

Biallelic mutation of BEST1 causes a distinct retinopathy in humans

Burgess R, Millar ID, Leroy BP, Urquhart JE, Fearon IM, De Baere E, Brown PD, Robson AG, Wright GA, Kestelyn P, Holder GE, Webster AR, Manson FD, Black GC. Biallelic mutation of BEST1 causes a distinct retinopathy in humans. Am J Hum Genet. 2008 Jan;82(1):19-31. PubMed PMID: 18179881

PubMed ID: 
18179881

Identification of the gene responsible for Best macular dystrophy

Petrukhin K, Koisti MJ, Bakall B, Li W, Xie G, Marknell T, Sandgren O, Forsman K, Holmgren G, Andreasson S, Vujic M, Bergen AA, McGarty-Dugan V, Figueroa D, Austin CP, Metzker ML, Caskey CT, Wadelius C. Identification of the gene responsible for Best macular dystrophy. Nat Genet. 1998 Jul;19(3):241-7.

PubMed ID: 
9662395

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