short nose

Baker-Gordon Syndrome

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

Poor visual acuity described as central in origin with poor eye contact.  Periorbital anomalies of low-set eyebrows and epicanthal folds are common.  The eyes have been described as "almond-shaped".  Strabismus and nystagmus are commonly present.

Systemic Features: 

The facial features ae described as "fine" with a short nose and a thin upper lip.  The forehead is unusually high. 

There is general developmental delay with impaired intellectual development, delayed or absent walking, and behavioral psychiatric manifestations such as stereotypic and unpredictable outbursts.   There are often involuntary and hyperkinetic movements with dystonia, dyskinesia, ataxia and choreoathetosis.  The EEG is often abnormal although seizures have not been reported.

Genetics

De novo heterozygous mutations in the SYT1 gene (12q21.2) have been associated with this condition.  

Pedigree: 
Autosomal dominant
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

No treatment has been reported.

References
Article Title: 

SYT1-associated neurodevelopmental disorder: a case series

Baker K, Gordon SL, Melland H, Bumbak F, Scott DJ, Jiang TJ, Owen D, Turner BJ, Boyd SG, Rossi M, Al-Raqad M, Elpeleg O, Peck D, Mancini GMS, Wilke M, Zollino M, Marangi G, Weigand H, Borggraefe I, Haack T, Stark Z, Sadedin S; Broad Center for Mendelian Genomics, Tan TY, Jiang Y, Gibbs RA, Ellingwood S, Amaral M, Kelley W, Kurian MA, Cousin MA, Raymond FL. SYT1-associated neurodevelopmental disorder: a case series. Brain. 2018 Sep 1;141(9):2576-2591.

PubMed ID: 
30107533

CHOPS Syndrome

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

There is usually some degree of proptosis and apparent hypertelorism.  The eyebrows are bushy and the eyelashes are luxurious.  One of three patients had cataracts and another had mild optic atrophy.

Systemic Features: 

The overall facial appearance may resemble Cornelia de Lange syndrome with hypertrichosis and a coarse, round facies.  Head circumference is low normal.  Septal defects and a patent ductus arteriosus are often present.  Laryngeal and tracheal malacia predispose to recurrent pulmonary infections and chronic lung disease.  Skeletal dysplasia includes brachydactyly and anomalous vertebral bodies resulting in short stature (3rd percentile).  Genitourinary abnormalities include cryptorchidism, horseshoe kidney, and vesiculoureteral reflux.  Delayed gastric emptying and reflux have been reported.

Genetics

Heterozygous mutations in the AFF4 gene (5q31.1) have been identified in 3 unrelated individuals with this condition.  No familial cases have been identified.  The gene is a core component of the super elongation complex that is critical to transcriptional elongation during embryogenesis.

Pedigree: 
Autosomal dominant
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

There is no treatment for the general disorder.  Tracheostomy was required in 2 of three reported patients. 

References
Article Title: 

Germline gain-of-function mutations in AFF4 cause a developmental syndrome functionally linking the super elongation complex and cohesin

Izumi K, Nakato R, Zhang Z, Edmondson AC, Noon S, Dulik MC, Rajagopalan R, Venditti CP, Gripp K, Samanich J, Zackai EH, Deardorff MA, Clark D, Allen JL, Dorsett D, Misulovin Z, Komata M, Bando M, Kaur M, Katou Y, Shirahige K, Krantz ID. Germline gain-of-function mutations in AFF4 cause a developmental syndrome functionally linking the super elongation complex and cohesin. Nat Genet. 2015 Apr;47(4):338-44.

PubMed ID: 
25730767

Craniofacial-Deafness-Hand Syndrome

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

This rare syndrome has anomalies in periocular structures but not in the eye itself.  The lid fissures are downward slanting with telecanthus and hypertelorism.  The nasolacrimal duct was missing in several individuals.

Systemic Features: 

The midface is generally flat with underdeveloped maxillary bones and absent or small nasal bones but there may be frontal bossing.  The nose appears hypoplastic with a broad, flat root resulting in dystopia canthorum.  Micrognathia and a high arched palate are sometimes present.   The sinuses are often underdeveloped.  There may be ulnar deviation of the hands and fingers while flexion contractures and clinodactyly of the 5th finger are often present.  A sensorineural hearing loss is present in many individuals.  No poliosis has been reported.

Genetics

This is an autosomal dominant condition secondary to mutations in the PAX3 gene (22q36.1) in at least some patients.  Changes in the same gene are responsible for types 1 and 3 of the Waardenburg syndrome (193500, 148820).  In fact, the major mutation, a heterozygous C-to-G transversion, has been identified in the same codon in both CDHS and Waardenburg 3 (148820) patients.

More patients need to be genotyped to clarify the clinical features distinctive of Waardenburg types 1 and 3 (193500, 148820) and CDHS syndrome.  Should we consider these conditions allelic or simply the result of variable expressivity?  The appearance of the nasal root and associated structures is similar and both conditions are associated with sensorineural hearing loss.  Type 3 Waardenburg syndrome (148820) often has a cleft palate and musculoskeletal deformities of the upper limbs and fingers.  So far, no pigmentation changes have been reported in CDHS.

Pedigree: 
Autosomal dominant
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

Surgical release of contractures could be considered.

References
Article Title: 
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