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Balcı S, Güçer Ş, Orhan D, Karagöz T. A well-documented trisomy
13 case presenting with a number of common and uncommon features of
the syndrome. Turk J Pediatr 2008; 50: 595-599.
Trisomy 13 is a very rare and lethal autosomal chromosomal malformation
syndrome. Its incidence is 1/12,000 births. In this paper, we present a new
trisomy 13 case associated with unusual and undescribed findings. This patient
was the first child of unrelated parents with advanced maternal and paternal
age, at 36 and 38 years, respectively. Unfortunately, the parents did not accept
the prenatal diagnosis. The baby was born after 34 weeks of gestation by
cesarian section. His birth weight was 1,865 g and he demonstrated typical
craniofacial abnormalities for trisomy 13 such as severe microphthalmia,
microcephaly and scalp defects, and peripheral chromosome analysis revealed
trisomy 13. He died of congenital heart disease and sepsis on the 12th
hospital day. A complete autopsy revealed a scalp and a skull defect at the
vertex, aplasia of the 5th finger nails, a complex heart disease including
pulmonary trunk atresia, patent foramen ovale, membranous ventricular septal
defect (VSD), main aorticopulmonary collateral artery (MAPCA) and aortic
dextroposition, arrhinencephaly, partial agenesis of the corpus callosum, and
neuronal heterotopias in the cerebellum. He also had bilateral cystic renal
dysplasia, Meckel’s diverticulum, right inguinal hernia, ectopic splenic tissue
in the pancreas, and ectopic thymus tissue adjacent to the thyroid.
To our knowledge, this is a unique trisomy 13 case with numerous common
and uncommon features including a bone defect in the skull, partial agenesis
of the corpus callosum, aplasia of the 5th finger nails, and a complex heart
disease including pulmonary atresia, patent foramen ovale, membranous VSD,
MAPCA and aortic dextroposition, which have not been published previously
in the relevant literature all together.
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