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Case Reports
. 1990 May;36(1):23-8.
doi: 10.1002/ajmg.1320360106.

Aland Island eye disease (Forsius-Eriksson ocular albinism) and an Xp21 deletion in a patient with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, glycerol kinase deficiency, and congenital adrenal hypoplasia

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Case Reports

Aland Island eye disease (Forsius-Eriksson ocular albinism) and an Xp21 deletion in a patient with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, glycerol kinase deficiency, and congenital adrenal hypoplasia

D A Pillers et al. Am J Med Genet. 1990 May.

Abstract

Glycerol kinase deficiency (GKD) has been described in isolation and in complex phenotypes including either congenital adrenal hypoplasia, Duchenne muscular dystrophy, or both. Cytogenetic and molecular studies have localized these defects to a deletion involving the X chromosome at band Xp21, consistent with its X-linked recessive pattern of inheritance. Other clinical findings in the complex glycerol kinase deficiency (CGKD) patients are mental retardation, short stature, and hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. We report on a 6-year-old boy who, in addition to the CGKD phenotype described above, had ocular hypopigmentation consistent with Forsius-Eriksson ocular albinism, also known as type 2 ocular albinism or Aland Island eye disease. Cytogenetic analysis shows an interstitial deletion in the short arm of the X-chromosome at Xp21.

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