RESUMO
Introduction: Duplication of 12q is characterized by craniofacial dysmorphia, growth failure, occasional brain malformations, abnormalities of the extremities, skeletal and thoracic malformations, cardiovascular defects, anogenital abnormalities like cryptorchidism, psychomotor delay, and intellectual disability. Case presentation: We describe a female patient with typical manifestations of duplication 12q and epilepsy. She had a normal 46,XX karyotype. The microarray assay exhibited a 19.35-Mb gain at 12q24.21q24.33 due to ins(21;12)(p11.2;q24.21q24.33)mat. Discussion and Conclusion: The duplicated region in the patient encompasses 219 genes, 24 considered as pathological. No relation between epilepsy and the genes reported as pathological has been reported.
RESUMO
Rearrangements of the distal region of 9p are important chromosome imbalances in human beings. Trisomy 9p is the fourth most frequent chromosome anomaly and is a clinically recognizable syndrome. Kleefstra syndrome, previously named 9q subtelomeric deletion syndrome, is either caused by a submicroscopic deletion in 9q34.3 or an intragenic mutation of EHMT1. We report a Mexican male patient with abnormal development, dysmorphism, systemic anomalies and a complex chromosomal rearrangement (CCR). GTG-banding revealed a 46,XY,add(9)(q34.3) karyotype, whereas array analysis resulted in arr[hg19] 9p24.3p23(203,861-11,842,172)×3, 9q34.3(138,959,881-139,753,294)×3, 9q34.3(139,784,913-141,020,389)×1. Array and karyotype analyses were normal in both parents. Partial duplication of 9p is one of the most commonly detected autosomal structural abnormalities in liveborn infants. A microdeletion in 9q34.3 corresponds to Kleefstra syndrome, whereas a microduplication in 9q34.3 shows a great clinical variability. Here, we present a CCR in a patient with multiple congenital anomalies who represents the first case with partial 9p trisomy, partial 9q trisomy and partial 9q monosomy.