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KMID : 0981820080280020155
Korean Journal of Laboratory Medicine
2008 Volume.28 No. 2 p.155 ~ p.159
A Case of Partial Trisomy 9pter ¢¡ q13 due to Paternal Balanced Translocation t (9;21) (q13;q21)
Woo Kwang-Sook

Kim Kyong-Eun
Kwon Eun-Young
Kim Jung-Pyo
Han Jin-Yeong
Abstract
Trisomy 9p is one of the most frequent autosomal anomalies compatible with a long survival rate. Clinical characteristics are craniofacial dysmorphisms including hypertelorism, prominent nose, deepset eyes, and down-slanting palpebral fissures. The degree of clinical severity in trisomy 9 roughly correlates with the extent of trisomic chromosomal material. If the trisomic segments include the long arm of chromosome 9, clinical findings may not fit into the trisomy 9p but rather resemble trisomy 9 mosaic syndrome and are associated with muscular and cardiac anomalies. Therefore, breakpoints
as well as clinical findings need to be precisely defined for differential diagnosis. Cases with trisomy 9p, especially involving proximal 9q, are very rare in Korea. The patient was a 1,920 g male infant born at 36 weeks 3 days of gestation to a 27-yr-old mother and 32-yr-old father after Cesarian section. The patient showed specific craniofacial anomalies, cardiac defects, and hand anomalies. Routine cytogenetic analysis, performed on peripheral blood using GTG banding, showed 46,XY,+der(9)t (9;21)(q13;q21),-21pat. Furthermore, FISH (Vysis Inc., USA) analysis with whole chromosome painting probes confirmed the derivative chromosome 9. (Korean J Lab Med 2008;28:155-9)
KEYWORD
Trisomy 9p, Congenital anomalies, Cytogenetics, FISH, Paternal balanced translocation
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