Paediatric Genetics Flashcards

1
Q

What are the features of Down syndrome?

A
Trisomy 21
Learning disability
Congenital heart disease
Hypothyroidism
Immunity (possibility of lymphopenia)
Early onset Alzheimer disease
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2
Q

What form of Down’s testing poses no harm to the foetus?

A

Non-invasive prenatal testing using next-generation sequencing of free fetal DNA in maternal blood

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3
Q

What other trisomies are there?

A

13 and 18

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4
Q

What does congenital mean?

A

Present at birth

Can be caused by genetics, environment or both

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5
Q

What are Multiple Congenital Anomaly Syndromes?

A

Two or more unrelated major structural malformations that cannot be explained by an underlying syndrome or sequence

Single gene disorders 30%
10% chromosomal
5% teratogens
55% unknown

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6
Q

How common are congenital abnormalities?

A

3% all births
20% children’s hospital admissions
30% infant deaths

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7
Q

What is a syndrome?

A

Pattern of clinical features occurring together

Cause may or may not be known

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8
Q

How common are Multiple Congenital Anomaly Syndromes?

A

Individually rare

Common as a group

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9
Q

What are the principles of diagnosing syndromes?

A

Clinical experience

Gestalt vs. recognition of pattern of features

Use of databases
-22 000 genes - how many genetic disorders?

Rapidly increasing utility of genomic analysis is revolutionizing diagnosis

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10
Q

How is a rare intellectual disability and/or malformation syndrome diagnosed?

A

History
Description
Recognition of patterns

Testing

  • Standard- biochemical, chromosome structure
  • Microarray now standard
  • Targetted testing
  • Moving to trio-based exome/genome
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11
Q

What signs of genetic condition may manifest in the head?

A

Shape
Size: macrocephaly, microcephaly
Ear position - Low set, posteriorly rotated indicates lack of maturity

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12
Q

What signs of genetic condition may manifest in the eyes?

A

Hypertelorism
-Inner canthal distance ICD and inter-pupillary distance IPD increased

Telecanthus/epicanthic folds
-ICD and IPD increased

EYES

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13
Q

What signs of genetic condition may manifest in the hands?

A

Finger length
Digital abnormalities
Palmar creases

Examples Marfan syndrome, Down syndrome

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14
Q

What is the hand anomalies in Marfan’s Syndrome?

A

Long, thing fingers

MF/THL usually >44%

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15
Q

What are the words used describe long and short fingers?

A

Arachnodactyly

Brachydactyly

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16
Q

What is polysyndactyly and what is a cause?

A

Conjoined and extra fingers or toes

Hox D13

17
Q

What is acrocephalopolysyndatyly and what is a cause?

A

Premature closing of cranial sutures commonly along with syndactuly (fusion of fingers or toes)
Greig/GLI3

Tall forehead
Polydactyly (multiple)
Syndactyly (joined)

18
Q

What are sequences?

A

One abnormality leads to another, can have multiple causes

19
Q

What is the Pierre-Robin sequence?

A

Small chin to cleft palate

20
Q

What is the foetal akinesia sequence?

A
Reduced foetal movement
Reduced breathing
Contractures
Clefting
Lung hypoplasia
21
Q

What is deformation and disruption?

A

Pattern of development normal to start with but becomes abnormal

Deformation: Organ parts are there
Disruption: Parts of organ/body part absent

22
Q

What is an association?

A

Two features or more features occur together more often than expected by chance
Mechanism unclear

23
Q

What is VATER?

A
V vertebral/VSD
A anorectal atresia
T tracheo-
E (o)esophageal fistula
R radial anomalies

Vaters syndrome

24
Q

What are features of Turner syndrome?

A

45 X

Lymphoedema (Puffy feet, nuchal translucency/cystic hygroma)

Increased carrying angle, low hairline, wide sp nipples, sandal gap

Short stature, occ. v mild learning diffy

Coarctation of aorta, hypothyroidism, UTI, osteoporosis & hypertension

Primary amenorrhoea & infertility

Hormonal therapy mitigates some features

25
Q

How might you genetically investigate a learning disability?

A

Microarray

Fragile X - for learning disability

Targetted tests driven by phenotype (cheaper)

Trio based Exome vs. trio-base genome analysis

  • Funding remains an issue
  • Trio-based exome in Scotland and genome in England!
26
Q

What are the signs of 22q11 deletion?

A

CATCH 22

C - Cleft palate
A - Abnormal facies
T - Thymic hypoplasia/immune deficiency
C - Calcium
H - Heart problems
27
Q

We all have variation in our genome so how can we test thousands of genes and find the cause of the intellectual disability?

A

Trio-based testing compares parents with child to filter out silent variations

  • Exons are targeted
  • Only relevant parts of genome targeted
28
Q

What is the importance of phenotyping?

A

The key to assessment of clinical relevance is the phenotype
That’s why accurate description of clinical features is important
A diagnosis helps the family see the future
And can help with future pregnancy planning, clinical care and treatment