PMID: 490235Nov 1, 1979Paper

Autosomal dominant microcephaly

The Journal of Pediatrics
R H Haslam, D W Smith

Abstract

Four families with autosomal dominant microcephaly are reported. Although the phenotype is nondistinctive, several patients had receding or small foreheads, upslanted palpebral fissures, or prominent ears. The degree of intellectual dysfunction is not as severe as that recorded in autosomal recessive microcephaly. It would appear that autosomal dominant microcephaly is more common than previously recorded, and that head circumference measurements of siblings and parents of affected patients should become a part of the initial investigation.

Citations

Nov 1, 1984·Journal of Communication Disorders·D D SangerK Dawson
Mar 1, 1991·Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology·C Dorman
May 21, 1983·British Medical Journal·R M WinterR G Wilson
Nov 1, 1988·Journal of Medical Genetics·P MerlobS H Reisner
Nov 1, 1979·The Journal of Pediatrics·F Hecht, J V Kelly
Mar 6, 2003·Neurologic Clinics·Gary D Clark
Aug 30, 2005·Advances in Pediatrics·Jules G Leroy, Jaime L Frías
Apr 16, 2002·Journal of Child Neurology·Nathan WatembergTally Lerman-Sagie
Dec 18, 1996·American Journal of Medical Genetics·A S Teebi, P Kaurah
Dec 23, 2017·Annals of Human Genetics·Ahmed AlfaresWafaa Eyaid
Apr 1, 1984·Teratology·K FriedM D Goldberg
Oct 1, 1984·Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, and Allied Disciplines·D Skuse
Jul 1, 1994·American Journal of Medical Genetics·L GiuffrèA Albanese
May 1, 1986·American Journal of Medical Genetics·C A Crowe, L H Dickerman
Jul 1, 1987·American Journal of Medical Genetics·J L TolmieJ M Connor
Feb 1, 1987·American Journal of Medical Genetics·A S TeebiA G White
Jul 1, 1989·American Journal of Medical Genetics·E Bawle, M Horton
Apr 1, 1987·Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology·M JaffeS Oren
Apr 1, 1983·Clinical Genetics·M L RamírezJ M Cantú
Jul 1, 1981·Clinical Genetics·B K Burton
Mar 1, 1996·Clinical Genetics·I AkaboshiS Yoshioka
May 20, 1998·Ophthalmic Genetics·L O AtchaneeyasakulR G Weleber
Jul 28, 2004·Brain & Development·Gary D Clark

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Aphasia

Aphasia affects the ability to process language, including formulation and comprehension of language and speech, as well as the ability to read or write. Here is the latest research on aphasia.

Related Papers

The Journal of Pediatrics
L N Rossi, M P Battilana
The Journal of Pediatrics
F Hecht, J V Kelly
Journal of Pediatric Psychology
E A Sassaman, A S Zartler
The Journal of Pediatrics
H B Pryor, H Thelander
© 2021 Meta ULC. All rights reserved