AUTOSOMAL TRISOMIES AND PARTIAL TRISOMY SYNDROMES (WITH PRESENTATION OF 2 CASES OF PARTIAL TRISOMY FOR E GROUP OF CHROMOSOMES)
- 1 January 1963
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 88 (8) , 389-+
Abstract
The establishing of 46 chromosomes as the normal complement in man and the report of the sex chromatin bodies in buccal smears were followed by reports of trisomies and other abnormal patterns of the X and Y chromosomes in Klinefelter''s and Turner''s syndromes. Abnormal autosomal complements were described in mongolism, in the E-trisomy syndrome, the D-trisomy syndrome, in the Sturge-Weber syndrome, Waldenstrom''s macroglobulinemia, benign congenital hypotonia, atrial septal defect and in the schizoid personality. Certain of these conditions, as well as the "oral-facial-digital" syndrome, were also found to exist as partial trisomies. The mechanism of a trisomy is one of non-disjunction and of partial trisomy translocation or insertion. Two cases of the partial trisomy in the E group are described; these are of especial interest because of the familial incidence, longer survival and male sex occurrence, features which are rarely seen in the full E-trisomy syndrome.This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
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