Waardenburg's Syndrome in Six Generations of One Family
- 1 June 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine
- Vol. 109 (6) , 579-583
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archpedi.1965.02090020581016
Abstract
Introduction SINCE Waardenburg's description in 19501 of a syndrome characterized by certain congenital abnormalities affecting the eyelids, in association with pigmentary defects in the irides and congenital deafness, increasing recognition of this condition has occurred in the foreign literature. At present, case reports come from England, Canada, Scandinavia, the Netherlands, South Africa, Germany, Israel, India, New Zealand, and Japan. In this country, Di George et al2 in 1960, for the first time, brought this little known syndrome to the attention of the American readers. A discovery of a family with Waardenburg's syndrome by one of us in 1963 prompted a search for additional cases in the American journals. A review at that time disclosed only one other paper, written by Stettelmayer and Hogan and published in 1961.3 It was their purpose to show that Waardenburg's syndrome could occur in a patient of mixed American heritage. Our reasonsKeywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- WAARDENBURG'S SYNDROMEActa Ophthalmologica, 1962
- A NEW SYNDROME COMBINING DEVELOPMENTAL ANOMALIES OF THE EYELIDS, EYEBROWS AND NOSE ROOT WITH PIGMENTARY DEFECTS OF THE IRIS AND HEAD HAIR AND WITH CONGENITAL DEAFNESS - DYSTOPIA-CANTHI MEDIALIS ET PUNCTORUM LACRIMALIUM LATEROVERSA, HYPERPLASIA SUPERCILII MEDIALIS ET RADICIS NASI, HETEROCHROMIA IRIDUM TOTALIS SIVE PARTIALIS, ALBINISMUS CIRCUMSCRIPTUS (LEUCISMUS, POLIOSIS), ET SURDITAS CONGENITA (SURDIMUTITAS)1951